Relationship between self-disclosure to first acquaintances and subjective well-being in people with schizophrenia spectrum disorders living in the community

Focusing on people with schizophrenia spectrum disorders living in the community, the present study aims to examine the characteristics of and gender differences in self-disclosure to first acquaintances, and to clarify the relationship between self-disclosure and subjective well-being. Participants...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2019-10, Vol.14 (10), p.e0223819-e0223819
Hauptverfasser: Yokoyama, Kazuki, Morimoto, Takafumi, Ichihara-Takeda, Satoe, Yoshino, Junichi, Matsuyama, Kiyoji, Ikeda, Nozomu
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Morimoto, Takafumi
Ichihara-Takeda, Satoe
Yoshino, Junichi
Matsuyama, Kiyoji
Ikeda, Nozomu
description Focusing on people with schizophrenia spectrum disorders living in the community, the present study aims to examine the characteristics of and gender differences in self-disclosure to first acquaintances, and to clarify the relationship between self-disclosure and subjective well-being. Participants (32 men and 30 women with schizophrenia spectrum disorders) were examined using the subjective well-being inventory, an original self-disclosure scale for people with mental illness, as well as the Rosenberg self-esteem scale, the Link devaluation-discrimination scale, and the affiliation scale. The self-disclosure content domains in descending order were as follows: "living conditions," "own strengths," "experiences of distress," and "mental illness and psychiatric disability." There were no significant gender differences in self-disclosure in the total and domain scores. Multiple regression analyses by gender revealed that: (1) in men, decreasing feelings of ill-being were significantly predicted by self-disclosure about "living conditions," self-esteem, and perceived stigma; (2) in women, increasing feelings of well-being were significantly predicted by self-disclosure about "own strengths," self-esteem, and sensitivity to rejection. Self-disclosure to first acquaintances was related to subjective well-being in people with schizophrenia spectrum disorders living in the community. This result supports the recovery model and the strengths model. It suggests the importance of interventions targeting self-disclosure to first acquaintances about experiences as human beings, such as "living conditions" and "own strengths," as it relates to subjective well-being in community-based mental health rehabilitation.
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subjects Adult
Biology and Life Sciences
Communities
Disorders
Domains
Female
Friends
Gender aspects
Gender differences
Health sciences
Humans
Living conditions
Male
Medicine and Health Sciences
Men
Mental disorders
Mental health
Mental health care
Metacognition
Middle Aged
Occupational therapy
Physical Sciences
Psychological factors
Regression Analysis
Rehabilitation
Research and Analysis Methods
Schizophrenia
Schizophrenic Psychology
Self Disclosure
Self Report
Sex differences
Social Sciences
Social Stigma
Socioeconomic Factors
Stigma
Studies
Well being
Women
Young Adult
title Relationship between self-disclosure to first acquaintances and subjective well-being in people with schizophrenia spectrum disorders living in the community
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