Research Article

Personality Pathology Predicts Outcomes in a Treatment-Seeking Sample with Bipolar I Disorder

Table 1

Means, standard deviations, and intercorrelations between study variables.

VariableM SDCorrelation matrixa
234567891011121314

(1) Baseline MHRSD9.099.28−0.69**−0.100.230.20−0.010.100.070.090.46**0.38**0.200.44**0.36**
(2) Baseline BRMS21.4110.520.20−0.10−0.090.020.04−0.08−0.18−0.27*−0.26*−0.13−0.22−0.30*
(3) Baseline SAS23.726.09−0.30*−0.060.79**0.090.280.68**−0.170.03−0.010.06−0.05
(4) 4-month MHRSD8.626.890.15−0.34**0.54**0.05−0.33*0.58**0.41**0.230.35**0.43**
(5) 4-month BRMS3.415.12−0.000.050.180.090.48**0.110.020.080.12
(6) 4-month SAS22.825.62−0.130.100.63**−0.190.05−0.160.11−0.01
(7) 28-month MHRSD5.835.210.21−0.100.49**0.33*0.47*0.230.15
(8) 28-month BRMS1.813.360.28−0.06−0.000.21−0.110.05
(9) 28-month SAS26.487.150.060.210.080.220.10
(10) Percent time symptomatic0.250.300.47*0.40**0.51**0.45**
(11) Total number of PD symptoms9.167.920.58**0.82**0.84**
(12) Total number cluster A symptoms1.301.830.25*0.32**
(13) Total number cluster B symptoms2.983.740.53**
(14) Total number cluster C symptoms3.743.38

 *P< 0.05. **P< 0.01.
aNumbers correspond to the numbered variables in the left-most column of the table.