scholarly journals The Role of Emotion Regulation and Loss-Related Coping Self-Efficacy in an Internet Intervention for Grief: A Mediation Analysis. (Preprint)

10.2196/27707 ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeannette Brodbeck ◽  
Thomas Berger ◽  
Nicola Biesold ◽  
Franziska Rockstroh ◽  
Stefanie J. Schmidt ◽  
...  
2018 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 1520437 ◽  
Author(s):  
Melanie F. Midkiff ◽  
Cynthia R. Lindsey ◽  
Elizabeth A. Meadows ◽  
Luca Cerniglia

2021 ◽  
Vol In Press (In Press) ◽  
Author(s):  
Mina Karami ◽  
Zohreh Rafezi ◽  
Maryam Sadat Motavalli ◽  
Nader Ayadi

Background: Pain is a pervasive and disabling barrier for the injured athlete threatening his/her ability to participate in sporting events and professional goals. However, psychological factors in the treatment process of chronic diseases are an important factor in involving the patient in treatment and making treatment decisions. Objectives: This research aimed to investigate the relationship between emotion regulation and pain self-efficacy with psychosocial adjustment in athletes with chronic pain, considering the mediating role of mental fatigue. Methods: The statistical population of this descriptive correlational study was all athletes with chronic pain referred to the Iranian Sports Medicine Federation. Using the convenience sampling method, a total of 200 injured athletes were selected as the sample size. For data collection, Psychosocial Adjustment to Illness Scale (PAIS), Pain Self-Efficacy Questionnaire (PSEQ), Pain Fatigue Scale (PFS), and Cognitive Emotion Regulation Questionnaire (CERQ-short) were used. Descriptive statistics, correlation matrix, and path analysis (structural model) were used to analyze data. Also, SPSS (v21) and AMOS (v23) software were used to analyze the data. Results: According to the results, pain self-efficacy (β = 0.18), adaptive emotion regulation (β = 0.27), and mental fatigue (β = -0.19) had a direct positive and significant impact on psychosocial adjustment. Also, the direct effect of pain self-efficacy (β = -0.19), maladaptive emotion regulation (β = 0.17), and adaptive emotion regulation (β = -0.12) on mental fatigue was significant. In addition, the indirect effect of pain self-efficacy and maladaptive emotions on psychosocial adjustment via mental fatigue was significant. Conclusions: Mental fatigue plays a good mediating role between pain self-efficacy and emotion regulation with psychosocial adjustment of athletes with chronic pain.


2015 ◽  
Vol 17 (8) ◽  
pp. e195 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leib Litman ◽  
Zohn Rosen ◽  
David Spierer ◽  
Sarah Weinberger-Litman ◽  
Akiva Goldschein ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeannette Brodbeck ◽  
Thomas Berger ◽  
Nicola Biesold ◽  
Franziska Rockstroh ◽  
Stefanie J. Schmidt ◽  
...  

BACKGROUND Internet interventions for mental disorders and psychological problems such as prolonged grief have established their efficacy. However, less is known about how internet interventions work and through which mechanisms they are linked to the outcomes. OBJECTIVE As a first step in identifying mechanisms of change, this study examined emotion regulation and loss-related coping self-efficacy as putative mediators in a randomised controlled trial of a guided internet intervention for prolonged grief symptoms after spousal bereavement or separation/divorce. METHODS The sample consisted of older adults who reported prolonged grief or adaptation problems after bereavement or separation/divorce and sought help from a guided internet intervention. They were recruited mainly via newspaper articles. Outcome variables were grief symptoms assessed with the Texas Revised Inventory of Grief and psychopathology symptoms assessed with the Brief Symptom Inventory. Six module-related items assessed loss-focused emotion regulation and loss-related coping-self-efficacy. Path models with the simultaneous inclusion of emotion regulation and self-efficacy investigated the specificity and relative strength of these variables as parallel mediators. RESULTS A total of 100 participants who took part in the guided internet intervention. Average age was 51 years; 80% were separated/divorced, 69% were female and 76% were of Swiss origin. The internet intervention increased emotion-regulation skills (b = .34; P = .001) and loss-related self-efficacy (b = .30; P = .002) which both correlated with improvements in grief and psychopathology symptoms. Path models including both putative mediators simultaneously indicated that emotion regulation was directly associated with improvements in grief symptoms (b = .40; P = <.001) but not psychopathology symptoms (b = .01; P = .638). Loss-related self-efficacy was directly related to improvements in psychopathology symptoms (b = .28; P = .017) but not grief symptoms (b = .16; P = .186). The path from the intervention to the improvement in grief remained significant (b = .25; P = .007) in contrast to the path from the intervention to improvements in psychopathology (b = .13; P = .179). CONCLUSIONS Emotion regulation and loss-related coping self-efficacy are promising therapeutic targets for optimizing internet interventions for grief. Emotion regulation appears to be more important for enabling grief processing whereas loss-related coping self-efficacy might be more relevant for improving psychopathology in general. Emotion regulation and coping self-efficacy should be further examined as transdiagnostic or disorder-specific putative mediators in internet interventions for other disorders. CLINICALTRIAL ClinicalTrials.gov NCT02900534; https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT02900534. INTERNATIONAL REGISTERED REPORT RR2-doi:10.1186/s13063-016-1759-5


Author(s):  
Andrew Friesen ◽  
Damian Stanley ◽  
Tracey Devonport ◽  
Andrew M. Lane

We examined intra- and interpersonal emotion regulation in the hour prior to athletic competition. Specifically, we investigated the extent to which differences between experienced and desired emotions were related to emotion regulation processes. Participants (n = 114) from team/doubles sport rated their experienced and desired emotions before a recent competition, and listed strategies used to regulate emotions reporting frequency, effectiveness, and self-efficacy for each strategy used. They followed the same procedure in relation to perceived emotions in a teammate. Results show athletes who experienced emotions close to their desired states reported significantly higher regulatory emotional self-efficacy than those further from their desired states. Further, their emotion regulation strategies were used more frequently and were more effective. Qualitative results indicated that participants attempted to regulate similar emotions in themselves and others, but used different strategies to accomplish these tasks to different degrees of frequency. The findings highlight the role of self-efficacy in emotion regulation; an individual difference variable which merits attention in future emotion regulation interventions.


2020 ◽  
pp. 155541202094462
Author(s):  
Camila Caro ◽  
Maša Popovac

Research suggests that gaming can play an important role in dealing with life difficulties, but few studies have examined this directly. Building on recent research, the current study set out to develop a measure of gaming in difficult life situations (GDLS) and explored the role of emotion regulation and coping self-efficacy as predictors of this behaviour. A total of 667 gamers completed the online survey. Initial analyses demonstrated validity and reliability of the GDLS scale (α = .92), with players turning to gaming as a distraction from life difficulties, to feel a sense of achievement, to connect with others, and for in-game connection and simulation. Multiple regression analysis showed that younger age, more time spent gaming in general, and lower coping self-efficacy predicted GDLS, but emotion regulation was non-significant. The study presents novel insights and a new measure for future research in this area.


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