Abstract: | INVESTIGATED WHETHER CONTINUATION OF A PATIENT IN A COMPREHENSIVE PROGRAM OF COMMUNITY-BASED PSYCHIATRIC REHABILITATION WAS RELATED TO HIS OVERALL STYLE OF COPING BEHAVIOR. EARLY IN THE SERVICE PROGRAM, 86 EX-MENTAL-PATIENTS WERE INDEPENDENTLY RATED B8 5-7 PROFESSIONALS ON A 7-CATEGORY SCALE: FEARFUL, DEPENDENT, IMPULSIVE, SOCIALLY NAIVE, WITHDRAWN, SELF-DEPRECATORY, HOSTILE. AT THE CLOSE OF THE PROGRAM, THEY WERE CLASSIFIED INTO 3 GROUPS: 30 SS WHO COMPLETED THEIR ASSIGNED REHABILITATION PROGRAM, 30 SS WHO DROPPED OUT BEFORE COMPLETION, AND 23 SS WHO WERE ADMINISTRATIVELY TERMINATED. RESULTS INDICATE THAT THE COPING SCALE WAS A RELIABLE ASSESSMENT DEVICE. COMPLETERS WERE JUDGED AS SIGNIFICANTLY LESS IMPULSIVE AND SOCIALLY NAIVE AND SIGNIFICANTLY MORE SELF-DEPRECATORY THAN THE OTHER 2 GROUPS COMBINED; THOSE TERMINATED DIFFERED FROM DROPOUTS ONLY IN THAT THE FORMER WERE SIGNIFICANTLY MORE SOCIALLY NAIVE. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved) |