Social skills: a resource for more social support, lower depression levels, higher quality of life, and participation in individuals with spinal cord injury?
- PMID: 25264110
- DOI: 10.1016/j.apmr.2014.09.006
Social skills: a resource for more social support, lower depression levels, higher quality of life, and participation in individuals with spinal cord injury?
Abstract
Objective: To examine the relevance of social skills and their different dimensions (ie, expressivity, sensitivity, control) in relation to social support, depression, participation, and quality of life (QOL) in individuals with spinal cord injury (SCI).
Design: Cross-sectional data collection within the Swiss Spinal Cord Injury Cohort.
Setting: Community-based.
Participants: Individuals with SCI (N=503).
Interventions: Not applicable.
Main outcome measures: Depression, participation, and QOL were measured using the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale, the Utrecht Scale for Evaluation of Rehabilitation-Participation, and 5 selected items of the World Health Organization Quality of Life Scale. The Social Skills Inventory and the Social Support Questionnaire were used to assess social skills (expressivity, sensitivity, control) and social support, respectively.
Results: Structural equation modeling was conducted. In model 1 (χ(2)=27.81; df=19; P=.087; root mean square error of approximation=.033; 90% confidence interval=.000-.052), social skills as a latent variable was related to social support (β=.31; R(2)=.10), depression (β=-.31; total R(2)=.42), and QOL (β=.46; R(2)=.25). Social support partially mediated the effect of social skills on QOL (indirect effect: β=.04; P=.02) but not on depression or participation. In model 2 (χ(2)=27.96; df=19; P=.084; root mean square error of approximation=.031; 90% confidence interval=.000-.053), the social skills dimension expressivity showed a path coefficient of β=.20 to social support and β=.18 to QOL. Sensitivity showed a negative path coefficient to QOL (β=-.15) and control a path coefficient of β=-.15 to depression and β=.24 to QOL.
Conclusions: Social skills are a resource related to more social support, lower depression scores, and higher QOL.
Keywords: Depression; Quality of life; Rehabilitation; Social support; Spinal cord injuries.
Copyright © 2015 American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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