Depression severity mediates stigma and quality of life in clinically stable people with schizophrenia in rural China

Author:

Zheng Siyuan,Wang Ruoqi,Zhang Shaofei,Ou Yangxu,Sheng Xuanlian,Yang Meng,Ge Menglin,Xia Lei,Li Jun,Zhou Xiaoqin

Abstract

Abstract Background Depressive symptoms associated with schizophrenia are closely related to stigma and quality of life(QOL). There is, however, no thorough research on the connection between the three. This study sought to investigate the possible factors influencing depressive symptoms in people with schizophrenia (PWS) in rural Chaohu, China, and to further explore the role of depression severity in stigma and lifestyle quality. Methods Eight hundred twenty-one schizophrenia patients accomplished the entire scale, including the 9-item Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9), the Social Impact Scale (SIS), and the World Health Organization on Quality of Life Brief Scale(WHOQOL—BREF). A straightforward mediation model was employed to determine if the intensity of the depression could act as a mediator between stigma and QOL. Results Two hundred seventy-nine schizophrenia patients (34%) had depressive symptoms (PHQ ≥ 10), and 542 patients (66%) did not (PHQ < 10). Logistic regression showed that marital status, job status, physical exercise, standard of living, and stigma contributed to the depressed symptoms of schizophrenia. Depression severity partially mediated the effect between stigma and QOL, with a mediating effect of 48.3%. Conclusions This study discovered a significant incidence of depressed symptoms associated with schizophrenia, with depression severity serving as a mediator variable connecting stigma and QOL and partially moderating the association.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health

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