TY - JOUR
T1 - Being with madness
T2 - personality characteristics of three treatment staffs
AU - Hirschfeld, R. M.A.
AU - Matthews, S. M.
AU - Mosher, L. R.
AU - Menn, A. Z.
PY - 1977
Y1 - 1977
N2 - The personality characteristics of the nonprofessional staff of Soteria House, an innovative residential treatment program for schizophrenics, are assessed and compared with characteristics of representative staffs from two more traditional mental health programs of schizophrenics: a university psychiatric ward and a community based program staffed by a specially trained group of state hospital aides. A battery of selfreport personality questionnaires was used. Analysis of the data indicates an overall similarity of personality profiles in the three groups. All groups demonstrated two sets of characteristics considered desirable for therapists of schizophrenics: the ego strength qualities of self assurance, emotional maturity, independence, and autonomy, and the affective qualities of warmth, sensitivity, and empathy. However, within a third set of characteristics, descriptive of cognitive attitudinal qualities, the Soteria staff possessed significantly more intuition, introversion, flexibility, and tolerance of altered states of consciousness. The authors speculate that it is this last set of characteristics that allows the Soteria staff to function in the program's intensive, unstructured treatment environment.
AB - The personality characteristics of the nonprofessional staff of Soteria House, an innovative residential treatment program for schizophrenics, are assessed and compared with characteristics of representative staffs from two more traditional mental health programs of schizophrenics: a university psychiatric ward and a community based program staffed by a specially trained group of state hospital aides. A battery of selfreport personality questionnaires was used. Analysis of the data indicates an overall similarity of personality profiles in the three groups. All groups demonstrated two sets of characteristics considered desirable for therapists of schizophrenics: the ego strength qualities of self assurance, emotional maturity, independence, and autonomy, and the affective qualities of warmth, sensitivity, and empathy. However, within a third set of characteristics, descriptive of cognitive attitudinal qualities, the Soteria staff possessed significantly more intuition, introversion, flexibility, and tolerance of altered states of consciousness. The authors speculate that it is this last set of characteristics that allows the Soteria staff to function in the program's intensive, unstructured treatment environment.
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U2 - 10.1176/ps.28.4.267
DO - 10.1176/ps.28.4.267
M3 - Article
C2 - 844816
AN - SCOPUS:0017333511
SN - 0022-1597
VL - 28
SP - 267
EP - 273
JO - Hospital and Community Psychiatry
JF - Hospital and Community Psychiatry
IS - 4
ER -