2017
DOI: 10.1016/j.comppsych.2016.11.008
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

An exploration of metacognitive beliefs and thought control strategies in bipolar disorder

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
2
1
1
1

Citation Types

1
11
0
14

Year Published

2018
2018
2023
2023

Publication Types

Select...
8

Relationship

1
7

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 16 publications
(26 citation statements)
references
References 29 publications
1
11
0
14
Order By: Relevance
“…This study is the first to demonstrate that metacognitive beliefs can mediate the effect of early emotional abuse on depression/anxiety, and further on positive symptoms, in psychotic and bipolar disorders. This replicates the findings by Myers and Wells (49) in patients with bipolar and psychotic disorders, and expands on previous research (including the first two studies included in this thesis) showing an intrinsic relationship between metacognitive beliefs, affective symptoms, and severe mental disorders (29,44,46,47,166,167). Our results suggest that specific metacognitive beliefs about thoughts being uncontrollable or dangerous function as a mechanism through which early emotional abuse could influence later symptomatic responses at a clinical level.…”
Section: Metacognitive Beliefs As a Potential Mediator Of Affective Asupporting
confidence: 90%
“…This study is the first to demonstrate that metacognitive beliefs can mediate the effect of early emotional abuse on depression/anxiety, and further on positive symptoms, in psychotic and bipolar disorders. This replicates the findings by Myers and Wells (49) in patients with bipolar and psychotic disorders, and expands on previous research (including the first two studies included in this thesis) showing an intrinsic relationship between metacognitive beliefs, affective symptoms, and severe mental disorders (29,44,46,47,166,167). Our results suggest that specific metacognitive beliefs about thoughts being uncontrollable or dangerous function as a mechanism through which early emotional abuse could influence later symptomatic responses at a clinical level.…”
Section: Metacognitive Beliefs As a Potential Mediator Of Affective Asupporting
confidence: 90%
“…A maioria dos estudos [44][45][46][51][52][53] utilizou alguma escala de avaliação da metacognição. Quatro estudos 45,[51][52][53] utilizaram o Metacognitions Questionnaire-30 (MCQ-30) 54 . O MCQ-30 é uma medida de autorrelato e contém cinco subescalas: crenças positivas sobre preocupações, crenças negativas sobre a incontrolabilidade e perigo de preocupação, confiança cognitiva, autoconsciência cognitiva e necessidade de controle.…”
Section: Instrumentosunclassified
“…Seis estudos 44,45,[51][52][53]57 compararam bipolares com controles em relação à metacognição. Cinco deles 45,[51][52][53]57 encontraram que bipolares tinham menos capacidade metacognitiva do que controles. O outro 44 não encontrou diferença quanto à capacidade metacognitiva entre bipolares e controles.…”
Section: Comparação Entre O Tb E Outros Transtornos Mentaisunclassified
“…Several studies using the Meta-Cognitions Questionnaire [38], which assess a range of metacognitive domains related with psychopathological processes such as low cognitive confidence, positive beliefs about worry, cognitive self-conscientiousness, negative beliefs about uncontrollability and danger, and belief concerning the need to control one's own thoughts, have shown a strong relationship between those and several psychological disorders and symptomatology. In this line, metacognitions have found to be related to different psychological issues such as depression [41], bipolar disorder [42], obsessive-compulsive disorder [43], generalized anxiety disorder [44], anxiety [45,46], gambling [47], substance use disorder [48] and eating disorders [49].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%