Walsh R Stephen, Muldoon Orla T, Gallagher Stephen, Fortune Donal G
a Department of Psychology , University of Limerick , Limerick , Ireland.
Neuropsychol Rehabil. 2015;25(4):555-73. doi: 10.1080/09602011.2014.993658. Epub 2014 Dec 17.
Social support is an important factor in rehabilitation following acquired brain injury (ABI). Research indicates that social identity makes social support possible and that social identity is made possible by social support. In order to further investigate the reciprocity between social identity and social support, the present research applied the concepts of affiliative and "self-as-doer" identities to an analysis of relationships between social identity, social support, and emotional status amongst a cohort of 53 adult survivors of ABI engaged in post-acute community neurorehabilitation. Path analysis was used to test a hypothesised mediated model whereby affiliative identities have a significant indirect relationship with emotional status via social support and self-as-doer identification. Results support the hypothesised model. Evidence supports an "upward spiral" between social identity and social support such that affiliative identity makes social support possible and social support drives self-as-doer identity. Our discussion emphasises the importance of identity characteristics to social support, and to emotional status, for those living with ABI.
社会支持是后天性脑损伤(ABI)康复过程中的一个重要因素。研究表明,社会身份使社会支持成为可能,而社会支持又使社会身份成为可能。为了进一步探究社会身份与社会支持之间的相互关系,本研究将归属身份和“行动者自我”身份的概念应用于对53名参与急性后期社区神经康复的成年ABI幸存者群体中社会身份、社会支持和情绪状态之间关系的分析。路径分析用于检验一个假设的中介模型,即归属身份通过社会支持和行动者自我认同与情绪状态存在显著的间接关系。结果支持了假设模型。有证据支持社会身份与社会支持之间的“良性循环”,即归属身份使社会支持成为可能,而社会支持推动行动者自我身份的形成。我们的讨论强调了身份特征对ABI患者的社会支持和情绪状态的重要性。