Pre‐rehabilitation sense of coherence as a predictor of symptom change after rehabilitation

Sense of coherence (SOC) constitutes the key component of salutogenesis theory. It reflects individuals' confidence that their environment is comprehensible and manageable and that their lives are meaningful. Research demonstrates a strong cross‐sectional relationship between SOC and mental hea...

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Veröffentlicht in:Stress and health 2020-10, Vol.36 (4), p.546-554
Hauptverfasser: Schäfer, Sarah K., Schanz, Christian G., Sopp, M. Roxanne, Lass‐Hennemann, Johanna, Käfer, Michael, Michael, Tanja
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Sense of coherence (SOC) constitutes the key component of salutogenesis theory. It reflects individuals' confidence that their environment is comprehensible and manageable and that their lives are meaningful. Research demonstrates a strong cross‐sectional relationship between SOC and mental health. However, little is known about SOC's temporal stability and its potential to predict changes in psychopathological symptom severity in different settings. The goal of the current study was to address this gap. The sample of the two‐wave longitudinal study consists of 294 patients receiving inpatient psychotherapeutic (and psychopharmacological) treatment for various psychological disorders at a German psychosomatic rehabilitation clinic. SOC (Antonovsky, Social Science & Medicine, 1993, 36, 725–733) and outcome measures (i.e., general mental health problems, depression and anxiety symptoms) were assessed within two days of arrival and at the end of rehabilitation (week 5/6). SOC was significantly enhanced after treatment whereas psychopathological symptoms were significantly reduced. Regression analyses revealed that pre‐treatment SOC was a significant negative predictor of post‐treatment symptom severity for all outcome measures even after controlling for pre‐treatment symptoms. The current findings provide first evidence that SOC is a significant unique predictor of symptom change. Future studies need to further investigate longitudinal associations between SOC and mental health outcomes in different settings.
ISSN:1532-3005
1532-2998
DOI:10.1002/smi.2949