Psychiatry Research Communications (Dec 2021)

Social closeness and cognitive functioning increase feelings of hope for individuals in inpatient treatment

  • Tovah Cowan,
  • Anna T. Pham,
  • Brita Elvevåg,
  • Alex S. Cohen

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 1, no. 2
p. 100011

Abstract

Read online

Hope is important in recovery during inpatient treatment. Prior research suggests social closeness and executive functioning are important in increasing hope. It is unclear whether these findings extend to inpatient settings, and how these constructs interact. Male psychiatric inpatients (N ​= ​98) were recruited from a substance use treatment facility. Hopefulness and social closeness were measured using an ambulatory survey, and executive functioning was measured using an ambulatory Trail Making Test (TMT). Patients provided data 3–4 times per week over four weeks. Multi-level modeling was used to determine whether hopefulness was predicted by social closeness and executive functioning. Social closeness was positively related to hopefulness. However, executive functioning did not predict hope alone but acted as a moderator – lower executive functioning diminished the effects of social closeness on hope. These findings provide practical implications for inpatient treatment — both social closeness and executive functioning should be considered when fostering hope.

Keywords