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Marialuisa Cavelti

Researcher at University of Bern

Publications -  45
Citations -  1043

Marialuisa Cavelti is an academic researcher from University of Bern. The author has contributed to research in topics: Borderline personality disorder & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 16, co-authored 36 publications receiving 842 citations. Previous affiliations of Marialuisa Cavelti include University of Ulm & University Hospital of Basel.

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Self-stigma and its relationship with insight, demoralization, and clinical outcome among people with schizophrenia spectrum disorders.

TL;DR: Interventions should address self-stigma, particularly if psychoeducational or other interventions have increased insight, and Therapeutic implications for changes of dysfunctional beliefs related to illness and self and change of self-concept in the context of recovery at the level of narrative identity are discussed.
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Are we addressing the ‘right stuff’ to enhance adherence in schizophrenia? Understanding the role of insight and attitudes towards medication

TL;DR: Interventions to enhance medication adherence may be more effective if they focus on treatment related attitudes rather than on global insight into illness.
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Assessing recovery from schizophrenia as an individual process. A review of self-report instruments.

TL;DR: The Recovery Assessment Scale is possibly the best currently available measure of personal recovery when all evaluation criteria are included and the ratings listed in the current paper depended on the availability of information and the quality of available reports of previous assessment of the measurement properties.
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Is formal thought disorder in schizophrenia related to structural and functional aberrations in the language network? A systematic review of neuroimaging findings.

TL;DR: Formal thought disorder in schizophrenia was found to be associated with structural and functional aberrations in the language network, however, there are studies that did not find an association between FTD and neural aberration of the languagenetwork and regions not included in thelanguage network have been associated with FTD.
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Therapeutic alliance in schizophrenia: The role of recovery orientation, self-stigma, and insight

TL;DR: Hierarchical multiple regressions revealed that more recovery orientation, less self-stigma, and more insight independently were associated with a better quality of the therapeutic alliance, while clinical symptoms, adult attachment style, age, and the duration of treatment by current therapist were unrelated to the quality.