All Relations between Personality Disorders and self-efficacy

Publication Sentence Publish Date Extraction Date Species
Angie H Ric. Interpersonal problems of persons with personality disorders and group outcomes. International journal of group psychotherapy. vol 53. issue 2. 2003-05-14. PMID:12712587. findings further revealed that self-esteem improved significantly more for those diagnosed with personality disorders. 2003-05-14 2023-08-12 human
E Ezquiaga, A García, T Pallarés, M F Brav. Psychosocial predictors of outcome in major depression: a prospective 12-month study. Journal of affective disorders. vol 52. issue 1-3. 1999-09-17. PMID:10357035. personality disorder, recurrent depression, low self-esteem and low satisfaction with social support were associated to non-full remission. 1999-09-17 2023-08-12 Not clear
P H Silverston. Low self-esteem in different psychiatric conditions. The British journal of clinical psychology. vol 30. issue 2. 1991-08-02. PMID:2059753. the patients with depression had lower self-esteem than most of the other patient groups except those with personality disorders. 1991-08-02 2023-08-11 Not clear
A J Ruderman, P S Grac. Bulimics and restrained eaters: a personality comparison. Addictive behaviors. vol 13. issue 4. 1989-04-27. PMID:3239467. one hundred and thirty six female undergraduates completed the restraint scale, the bulimia test, the narcissistic personality disorder scale, a borderline personality disorder scale, the body cathexis scale, and the tennessee self-concept scale which yields six measures of self-esteem (physical self, moral-ethical self, personal self, family self, social self, and total self-esteem) and four measures of psychopathology (general maladjustment, psychosis, personality disorder, and neurosis). 1989-04-27 2023-08-11 Not clear
R D Weiss, S M Miri. Subtypes of cocaine abusers. The Psychiatric clinics of North America. vol 9. issue 3. 1986-11-25. PMID:3774602. these include depressed patients who value the euphorigenic effects of the drug, patients with bipolar or cyclothymic disorder who use cocaine to augment manic or hypomanic symptoms or to alleviate depression, adults with add, residual type, who find that cocaine has a paradoxical effect of increasing attention span and decreasing motor restlessness, patients with narcissistic and borderline personality disorders who use cocaine for its social prestige and because it bolsters self-esteem, and patients with antisocial personality disorder who use cocaine as part of an overall pattern of antisocial behavior. 1986-11-25 2023-08-11 Not clear