Abstract
Objectives
The present study examined the longitudinal impact of self-compassion and psychological flexibility on clinical recovery and personal recovery among people with mental illness and explored the potential mechanisms underlying this impact. We hypothesized that self-compassion and psychological flexibility would be longitudinally associated with higher levels of clinical recovery and personal recovery and these longitudinal associations would be mediated by lower levels of self-stigma and disengagement from mental health services.
Method
On three occasions (i.e., T1, T2, and T3) across 2 years, 202 people with mental illness provided questionnaire data on self-compassion, psychological flexibility, self-stigma, service disengagement, clinical recovery, and personal recovery.
Results
Path analyses showed that self-compassion and psychological flexibility at T1 had significant direct effects on self-stigma and service disengagement at T2, which, in turn, had significant direct effects on clinical recovery and personal recovery at T3. Bootstrap analyses further showed that self-compassion and psychological flexibility at T1 had significant indirect effects on clinical recovery and personal recovery at T3 through self-stigma and service disengagement at T2.
Conclusions
Our findings reveal how self-compassion and psychological flexibility may enable people with mental illness to reduce self-stigma and service disengagement, which can, in turn, facilitate symptomatic remission and promote psychological wellness. These findings point to the potential utility of cultivating self-compassion and psychological flexibility in enabling people with mental illness to recover from mental health problems and live hopeful and satisfying lives.
Preregistration
This study is not preregistered.