Financial difficulties in bipolar disorder part 1: longitudinal relationships with mental health
Financial difficulties in bipolar disorder part 1: longitudinal relationships with mental health
Background: There has been little research on whether finances affect mental health in bipolar disorder. Aims: This study aimed to examine the relationship between finances and mental health in bipolar disorder across two time points. Methods: Fifty-four participants with bipolar disorder in a National Health Service community mental health service completed questionnaires examining financial difficulties, compulsive buying and perceived financial well-being. Questionnaires also measured alcohol dependence, stress, depression, anxiety, past and current manic symptoms. Results: Partial correlations showed correlations over time: depression, anxiety and stress predicted later compulsive buying. Compulsive buying also predicted later anxiety. Lower perceived financial wellness increased anxiety and stress over time. Being on benefits was associated with higher depression and going without items such as clothes was linked to higher depression, stress, anxiety and past hypomanic symptoms. Conclusions: Financial difficulties are related to mental health in bipolar disorder. Poor mental health leads to compulsive buying, whereas worry about finances increases anxiety and stress, with a vicious cycle for anxiety.
Bipolar disorder, compulsive buying, debt, finances
595-601
Richardson, Thomas
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Jansen, Megan
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Fitch, Chris
620ed2fb-826b-48c0-8df4-e0f1b4209aba
Richardson, Thomas
f8d84122-b061-4322-a594-5ef2eb5cad0d
Jansen, Megan
0cb45894-0310-4e66-bd06-bd773ee06c8e
Fitch, Chris
620ed2fb-826b-48c0-8df4-e0f1b4209aba
Richardson, Thomas, Jansen, Megan and Fitch, Chris
(2018)
Financial difficulties in bipolar disorder part 1: longitudinal relationships with mental health.
Journal of Mental Health, 27 (6), .
(doi:10.1080/09638237.2018.1521920).
Abstract
Background: There has been little research on whether finances affect mental health in bipolar disorder. Aims: This study aimed to examine the relationship between finances and mental health in bipolar disorder across two time points. Methods: Fifty-four participants with bipolar disorder in a National Health Service community mental health service completed questionnaires examining financial difficulties, compulsive buying and perceived financial well-being. Questionnaires also measured alcohol dependence, stress, depression, anxiety, past and current manic symptoms. Results: Partial correlations showed correlations over time: depression, anxiety and stress predicted later compulsive buying. Compulsive buying also predicted later anxiety. Lower perceived financial wellness increased anxiety and stress over time. Being on benefits was associated with higher depression and going without items such as clothes was linked to higher depression, stress, anxiety and past hypomanic symptoms. Conclusions: Financial difficulties are related to mental health in bipolar disorder. Poor mental health leads to compulsive buying, whereas worry about finances increases anxiety and stress, with a vicious cycle for anxiety.
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Accepted/In Press date: 26 July 2018
e-pub ahead of print date: 16 November 2018
Keywords:
Bipolar disorder, compulsive buying, debt, finances
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Local EPrints ID: 428225
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/428225
ISSN: 0963-8237
PURE UUID: 963afd3c-3dcc-45f5-ad35-d60958288b6b
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Date deposited: 15 Feb 2019 17:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 04:43
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Author:
Megan Jansen
Author:
Chris Fitch
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