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Relationship between emotional intelligence and neurocognition in severe mental disorders

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 March 2020

E. Chapela*
Affiliation:
Hospital Universitario Infanta Leonor, Psychiatry, Madrid, Spain
I. Morales
Affiliation:
Psikids, Psychiatry, Madrid, Spain
J. Quintero
Affiliation:
Hospital Universitario Infanta Leonor, Psychiatry, Madrid, Spain Psikids, Psychiatry, Madrid, Spain
M. Félix-Alcántara
Affiliation:
Hospital Universitario Infanta Leonor, Psychiatry, Madrid, Spain
J. Correas
Affiliation:
Hospital del Henares, Psychiatry, Madrid, Spain
J. Gómez-Arnau
Affiliation:
Hospital del Henares, Psychiatry, Madrid, Spain
*
*Corresponding author.

Abstract

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Introduction

The severe mental disorders are the subject of growing research in the area of emotional intelligence because of his relationship with psychosocial functionality loss. Despite treatment advances, patients continue to experience high levels of social, professional and personal disabilities, related to the presence of deficits in cognition. These changes are manifested in two areas: the neurocognitive and social cognition.

Objectives

To better understand the relationship between neuro- and sociocognition in schizophrenia and bipolar disorder.

Aims

The aim of this research is to study the factors related to emotional intelligence, with particular interest in neurocognitive deficits.

Methods

A total of 75 adult patients with schizophrenia and bipolar disorder type I were evaluated. The assessment protocol consisted of a questionnaire on socio-demographic and clinical-care data, and a battery of clinical and cognitive scales, including MSCEIT, WAIS-IV, TMT and Rey Figure.

Results

MSCEIT was negatively correlated with age, the severity of the clinical symptoms (BPRS, CGI-S), the TMT-A and the Test of Complex Figure, and positively with the intelligence quotient.

Conclusions

The deficits in emotional intelligence are part of a set of cognitive, social and non-social skills, which are altered in these severe mental disorders. Emotional intelligence worsens with the deterioration of cognitive functioning, executive dysfunction and severity of psychiatric disorder.

Disclosure of interest

The authors have not supplied their declaration of competing interest.

Type
EV331
Copyright
Copyright © European Psychiatric Association 2016
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