4.2 Article

Psychiatric Symptoms Moderate the Effects of Mental Illness Self-management in a Randomized Controlled Trial

Journal

JOURNAL OF NERVOUS AND MENTAL DISEASE
Volume 202, Issue 3, Pages 193-199

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/NMD.0000000000000098

Keywords

Illness self-management; recovery education; peer-led education

Funding

  1. US Department of Education, National Institute on Disability and Rehabilitation Research
  2. Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, Center for Mental Health Services [H133B050003, H133B100028]

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Depression has been shown to moderate the effects of physical illness self-management (ISM) programs. We attempted to replicate these findings for a mental ISM intervention. Outpatients with serious mental illness (N = 428) from eight Tennessee communities were randomly assigned to receive a peer-led self-management intervention called Building Recovery of Individual Dreams and Goals Through Education and Support or services as usual. Psychiatric symptoms were assessed with the Brief Symptom Inventory; the outcome of personal empowerment was measured by the Empowerment Scale. Intent-to-treat analysis using mixed-effects random regression found significant interaction effects between study condition and three moderating symptom profiles. Empowerment was greater for the intervention participants with high levels of depressive symptoms, anxiety symptoms, and general symptom distress than for the experimental participants with low symptom levels and the control subjects with high or low levels of symptoms. These results shed light on how mental ISM programs operate and ways these can be improved.

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