Group Cohesiveness, Group-Derived Collective Self-Esteem, Group-Derived Hope, and the Well-Being of Group Therapy Members.

Cheri Marmarosh, Ari Holtz, Michele Schottenbauer

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

I. D. Yalom's (1995) hypothesis that group therapy cohesiveness is the precursor to the development of group-derived collective self-esteem (CSE), hope for the self (HS), and psychological well-being (personal self-esteem and depression) was tested. Participants were 102 university counseling center group therapy clients from process (n = 54) and theme (n = 48) groups. Path analyses supported Yalom's theory that cohesiveness is the primary group factor and that it directly related to curative group factors such as CSE and HS. Additional path analyses showed that the relationship between group therapy CSE and personal self-esteem was moderated by HS, such that a significant relationship between CSE and personal self-esteem was no longer found once HS was entered into the model. Implications of these findings for research and practice are discussed.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)32-44
Number of pages13
JournalGroup Dynamics
Volume9
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Mar 2005

Keywords

  • GROUP psychotherapy
  • GROUP counseling
  • SELF-esteem
  • SUPPORT groups
  • SELF-confidence
  • PSYCHOTHERAPY
  • HYPOTHESIS
  • GROUP relations training
  • RESEARCH

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