Abstract

BackgroundPerceived well-being is key in the recovery from major depressive disorder (MDD). It is however unclear how well-being relates to other aspects of recovery, like depressive symptom severity, acceptance, disease identification and social participation. In patients with MDD we investigated 1) changes in these five concepts over time, 2) which concepts associate with well-being, and 3) whether a relationship between depressive symptoms and well-being is moderated by acceptance, disease identification and social participation. MethodsAdult outpatients with MDD (n=77) were administered the Mental Health Continuum-Short Form, the Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology, the Acceptance and Action Questionnaire-II, the Pictorial Representation of Illness and Self Measure, and the Scale Functional Remission before treatment and six months later. Changes over time were tested using paired samples t-tests, associations between concepts were tested with correlations. Regression analyses were used to test moderation effects. ResultsParticipants improved on all outcome measures. Well-being correlated moderately with depressive symptom severity (negative correlation) and acceptance at baseline, and strongly at follow-up. At follow-up well-being also correlated moderately with disease identification and social participation. No evidence for moderation was found. LimitationsRecruitment in one regional mental health center might limit generalizability. Furthermore, confounding effects of psychiatric comorbidity on recovery and well-being cannot be ruled out. ConclusionRecovery in patients with MDD is associated with improvement on multiple outcome domains. Symptom severity and acceptance showed the strongest association with perceived well-being. Future studies should explore whether treatments targeting symptom severity and acceptance have the strongest impact on recovery.

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