Social support and the course of bipolar disorder.

  • S L Johnson
  • C A Winett
  • Björn Meyer
  • W J Greenhouse
  • I Miller

Abstract

The current study prospectively examined the impact of social support on symptom severity and recovery from episodes in bipolar disorder, both as a direct influence and as a buffer of life events. Fifty-nine individuals with Bipolar I disorder were followed longitudinally with monthly symptom severity interviews. Social support was measured by the Interpersonal Support Evaluation List and the Interview Schedule for Social Interaction, and life events were assessed using the Life Events and Difficulties Schedule. Individuals with low social support took longer to recover from episodes and were more symptomatic across a 6-month follow-up. Results suggest a polarity-specific effect, in that social support influences depression but not mania. Discussion focuses on theoretical implications of a series of polarity-specific findings within the field.

Bibliographical data

Original languageGerman
Article number4
ISSN0021-843X
Publication statusPublished - 1999
pubmed 10609420