Abstract

We tested the hypothesis that older adults are more likely than younger adults to consider their current mental health status when estimating their own recovery from psychiatric illness because many older people were first hospitalized for psychiatric illness prior to the emergence of the recovery movement in the 1990s, before recovery was redefined to include life improvements other than symptom alleviation. Seventy-one members of a rehabilitation program (age 23 to 69; M = 49) were asked to rate satisfaction with their own recovery and with their current mental and physical health. The study hypothesis was tested in two hierarchical regression analyses that examined variation in the correlation between mental health and recovery self-ratings first by age and then by year of first hospitalization. The correspondence between mental health and recovery self-ratings was twice as strong for adults age 50 and older compared with those younger than age 50 and this same age difference in self-ratings was also evident for participants first hospitalized for a psychiatric illness earlier versus later than 1990. The correlation between physical health and recovery self-ratings did not vary by age or year of first hospitalization. Recovery-oriented interventions will be most effective for older individuals when service providers take into account their personal histories and the propensity of many older adults to associate recovery with symptom improvement even while embracing other life improvements.

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