Author:
SHERRINGTON J. M.,HAWTON K.,FAGG J.,ANDREW B.,SMITH D.
Abstract
Background. A previous study of women 9 months after discharge from in-patient treatment for
depression found that low self-esteem as measured by a self-report questionnaire at admission was
associated with a worse prognosis. This study investigates the womens' outcome more than 4 years
after discharge and the continued prognostic relevance of self-esteem and other variables.Method. Fifty-six women who had been admitted to hospital with major depression and studied in
detail during their admission and 9 months following discharge were traced 4–5 years later. Possible
prognostic factors were investigated in relation to time to recovery and recurrence, and to a global
outcome measure.Results. In keeping with other published work only 16 out of 52 (31%) women had recovered and
remained well. Fifteen out of 52 (29%) subjects had experienced depressive symptoms for more
than 70% of the follow-up time or died from unnatural causes. Low self-esteem scores recorded at
the initial admission correlated with slow recovery but not subsequent recurrence of depression. The
occurrence of one or more life events in the year preceding admission was associated with a better
prognosis.Conclusions. The poor long-term prognosis of many women with severe depression was confirmed.
Social factors, such as social support and marital relationships were less important for prognosis
than in previous studies of less severely ill subjects. The prognostic value of self-esteem warrants
further investigation and appears to have therapeutic implications.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Applied Psychology
Cited by
17 articles.
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