Research in brief
Editor:
Gary Winship
Submissions address:
University of Nottingham, Jubilee Campus,
Nottingham, NG8 1BB, UK
Proactive coping in schizophrenia:
examining the impact of
neurocognitive variables
Introduction
Stress-vulnerability models of schizophrenia have
long suggested that multiple confluent variables
influence disease outcome, including individual vul-
nerability and environmental factors (Nuechterlein
& Dawson 1984). In general, people with schizo-
phrenia tend to employ poor problem-solving strat-
egies, are more likely to adopt passive coping styles,
tend to use fewer types of coping strategies and
have a propensity to avoid stressors (Thurm &
Haefner 1987, Wiedl 1992, Macdonald et al. 1998,
Horan & Blanchard 2003, Lysaker et al. 2003).
These tendencies have an adverse effect on symp-
toms, social functioning, quality of life and risk of
relapse, particularly when patients face stressful life
events (Norman & Malla 1993, Horan et al. 2007).
Although the classical view of coping conceptu-
alizes coping as a compensatory and reactive set of
strategies in response to a stressor, a more positive,
future-oriented and preventive means of coping,
called proactive coping, has more recently been
proposed (Greenglass 2002, Schwarzer 2004).
Proactive coping, a concept derived from the posi-
tive psychology movement, integrates processes
of personal quality of life management and self-
regulatory goal striving, encouraging individuals
to view environmental demands as stimulating
challenges rather than as stressors (Greenglass
2002, Greenglass et al. 2006). Proactive coping
emphasizes the accumulation and mobilization
of resources when needed and allows individuals
to manage potential stressful events before they
occur to promote personal growth in general
and to enhance one’s sense of self-determination
(Greenglass et al. 2005, Greenglass & Fiksenbaum
2009). Yanos & Moos (2007) suggest that goal
attainment and proactive coping are crucial for the
achievement of positive outcomes in schizophrenia.
As a multidimensional process, proactive coping
requires diverse abilities such as volition, planning,
mental simulation, hypothesis generation, moni-
toring and intentional action according to a plan
(Schwarzer 1999, Aspinwall 2005). For this reason,
we hypothesize that proactive coping behaviours in
schizophrenia depend on a patient’s neurocognitive
state. Deficits to a variety of cognitive functions
may limit the rate at which people with schizophre-
nia can learn coping strategies and may also inter-
fere with a patient’s ability to form associations
in order to do more than avoid difficulties in his/
her daily life. Indeed, cross-sectional data indicate
that neurocognitive impairment, particularly on
measures of executive functioning, memory and
sustained attention, predicts passive avoidance
strategies and decreased preference for approach-
based coping responses (Wilder-Willis et al. 2002,
Lysaker et al. 2004, 2005, Ventura et al. 2004).
In the absence of severe life events, patients with
fewer cognitive resources, as estimated by an elec-
trophysiological measure (P300 amplitude), exhib-
ited poorer adaptive coping skills and an elevated
risk of relapse (Pallanti et al. 1997).
To date, however, no studies have examined
the effects of neurocognition on proactive coping
in people with schizophrenia. The purpose of the
current study was to examine associations between
neurocognitive measures and a variety of coping
domains, with a primary focus on proactive coping.
Methods
The initial sample consisted of 37 stable patients
recruited from three psychiatric institutions in north-
ern Portugal with a DSM-IV diagnosis of schizo-
phrenia. The patients showed no evidence of mental
retardation, organic brain diseases or drug/alcohol
dependence. The study was approved by local direc-
tive boards. After the study aims and procedures
were explained, the patients were required to provide
written informed consent to participate.
From the initial sample, nine subjects abandoned
the study during the follow-up period, resulting in a
Journal of Psychiatric and Mental Health Nursing, 2014, 21, 471–476
© 2014 John Wiley & Sons Ltd 471