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. 2023 Aug 3;16:2961–2975. doi: 10.2147/PRBM.S402455

Table 1.

Results of the Meta-Analysis of Studies on the Relation Between Self-Esteem (SE) and Self-Compassion (SC) and the Relations Between Both Self-Related Constructs and Indices of Well-Being and Psychological Problems

k N Average r Effect Size r 95% CI p Heterogeneity Q
SE – SC 76 35,537 0.60 0.71 0.56, 0.86 < 0.001 1145.48
SE – Well-being 45 20,661 0.39 0.45 0.31, 0.59 < 0.001 1594.19
SC – Well-being 45 20,661 0.36 0.40 0.26, 0.55 < 0.001 967.20
SE – Psychological problems 69 27,909 −0.43 −0.49 −0.34, −0.65 < 0.001 2090.34
SC – Psychological problems 69 27,909 −0.41 −0.46 −0.30, −0.61 < 0.001 1300.97
SE – Well-being (controlled for SC) 45 20,661 0.24 0.26 0.12, 0.40 < 0.001 622.30
SC – Well-being (controlled for SE) 45 20,661 0.18 0.19 0.05, 0.33 < 0.001 266.73
SE – Psychological problems (controlled for SC) 69 27,909 −0.26 −0.30 −0.14, −0.45 < 0.001 10,920.07
SC – Psychological problems (controlled for SE) 69 27,909 −0.22 −0.24 −0.03, −0.39 < 0.001 7319.35

Notes: Heterogeneity was evaluated by means of the open-source software package Jamovi (https://www.jamovi.org). The Q-statistic was significant for all analyses, indicating that the results were heterogeneous across studies.