| Abstract |
[Abstract] Objective To investigate the status quo of mental resilience in patients with major depression and analyze the related influencing factors. Methods: A cross-sectional investigation was used to select patients diagnosed with major depression who came to our hospital from January 2020 to January 2022 as the study objects, and set the normal population as the control group during the same period. General data questionnaire and blood index were collected for univariate analysis. Pearson or Spearman correlation analysis was used to analyze the correlation between the scores of Psychological resilience Scale (CD-RISC) and Baker Depression Scale (BDI), Baker Anxiety Scale (BAI), Perceptive Social Support Scale (PSSS) and Self-acceptance Questionnaire (SAQ). The factors affecting mental resilience of patients with major depression were obtained by hierarchical regression analysis. Results: There were significant differences in CD-RISC, BDI, BAI, PASS and SAQ between MDD group and normal control group (P<0.05). MDD patients with different age, personality, educational level and thyroid function had statistically significant differences in mental resilience scores (P<0.05), and MDD patients with BDI, BAI, SAQ and mental resilience levels were negatively correlated (P<0.05). The total score of PSSS was positively correlated with mental resilience (P<0.05). Hierarchical regression analysis showed that depression degree, BDI and SAQ were independent risk factors affecting mental resilience of MDD patients (P<0.05). Conclusion: The mental resilience of MDD patients is generally at a low level, and age, personality, education, thyroid function, BDI, SAQ are closely related to the level of mental resilience.
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