Self-Esteem in Patients who have Recovered from Psychosis: Profile and Relationship to Quality of Life

Author:

Gureje Oye1,Harvey Carol2,Herrman Helen3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychiatry, University College Hospital, Ibadan, Nigeria

2. Department of Psychiatry, The University of Melbourne and North Western Mental Health, Academic Centre for Community Mental Health, 130 Bell Street, Coburg, Victoria, 3058, Australia

3. Department of Psychiatry, University of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia

Abstract

Background: New developments in pharmacotherapy are likely to improve substantially the symptomatic recovery from psychosis but low self-esteem may compromise quality of life. Aims: To investigate the profile and correlates of self-esteem in individuals who have achieved symptomatic recovery from psychosis and determine its relationship with quality of life. Method: Sixty-one individuals who had been free of psychotic symptoms for 6 months were selected during a community-based epidemiological survey of psychoses. Participants were evaluated for subjective assessment of self-esteem using a self-report questionnaire, for clinical and antecedent features of illness, and for quality of life. Results: Forty-three percent had scores in the range indicative of low self-esteem on the questionnaire. Level of self-esteem was unrelated to gender, employment status, the type of psychotic disorder, course of disorder or premorbid social adjustment. Depression was associated with reduced levels of self-esteem. However, independent of depression and other confounding variables, a low level of self-esteem was a risk factor for impaired quality of life. Conclusions: Self-esteem is often low among persons who have achieved symptomatic recovery from psychosis, is associated with depression and is a predictor of quality of life.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,General Medicine

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