This case report describes the implementation and observed outcomes of an empowerment-oriented case management approach in a patient with treatment-resistant schizophrenia (TRS), addressing the limitations of conventional approaches that often neglect patient autonomy and subjective agency. Through the implementation of a multidisciplinary, four-dimensional empowerment framework—comprising pathological treatment, psychological cognition, social engagement, and family care—a 34-year-old male TRS patient received targeted intervention over a three-year period. Quantitative assessments, including PANSS, HRSD, SDSS, CGI, MRSS, and FAES II-CV, demonstrated substantial improvements: PANSS total score decreased from 90 to 61, CGI severity score reduced from 6 to 3, and MRSS dependency subscale declined from 29 to 14. Qualitative interviews further revealed enhanced medication adherence, symptom self-monitoring, and social functioning, alongside increased daily autonomy, reduced stigma, and improved family dynamics. These preliminary observations from a single case suggest potential benefits that warrant systematic investigation through controlled studies. The temporal associations observed between the intervention and improvements cannot establish causality but provide hypotheses for future research.
Wang et al. (Mon,) studied this question.