“…Coping skills have been widely associated with the amelioration or stabilization of psychotic symptoms, and the role of self-efficacy in this relationship has been explored in many studies (e.g. Hultman, Wieselgren, & Ohman, 1997;Jex, Bliese, Buzzel, & Primeau, 2001;Lecomte, Cyr, Lesage, Wilde, Leclerc, & Ricard, 1999;Lysaker, Clements, Wright, Evans, & Marks, 2001;MacDonald, Pica, McDonald, Hayes, & Baglioni, 1998;McDermott, 1995;Pratt, Mueser, Smith, & Lu, 2005;Ritsner & Blumenkrantz, 2007;Ritsner & Susser, 2004;Ritsner et al, 2000;Ritsner, Gibel, Ponizovsky, Shinkarenko, Ratner, & Kurs, 2006;Roe, Yanos, & Lysaker, 2006;Semple, Patterson, Shaw, Grant, Moscona, & Jeste, 1999;Solomon & Draine, 1995;Vauth, Kleim, Wirtz, & Corrigan, 2007;Ventura, Nuechterlein, Subotnik, Green, & Gitlin, 2004). Coping and coping skills may act as protective factors against the exacerbation of clinical symptoms, relapse risk, and a decline in patients' quality of life.…”