2013
DOI: 10.1016/j.comppsych.2013.05.008
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Cognitive emotion regulation strategies contributing to resilience in patients with depression and/or anxiety disorders

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Cited by 168 publications
(135 citation statements)
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References 64 publications
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“…However, suppression may be functional if one faces a situation in which controlling the emotional display prevents a major negative event from happening (e.g., emotional suppression in a workplace discussion may prevent losing one's job). Also, although our results support a greater role for maladaptive emotion regulation strategies, the associations found with refocuses on planning are consistent with the literature in highlighting the importance of adaptive strategies as underlying mechanisms in psychopathology (Kelly et al, 2012;Min et al, 2013). Again, even a transdiagnostic perspective that emphasizes maladaptive emotion regulation indicates that adaptive emotion regulation strategies matter in particular circumstances , 2012a, 2012b.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 80%
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“…However, suppression may be functional if one faces a situation in which controlling the emotional display prevents a major negative event from happening (e.g., emotional suppression in a workplace discussion may prevent losing one's job). Also, although our results support a greater role for maladaptive emotion regulation strategies, the associations found with refocuses on planning are consistent with the literature in highlighting the importance of adaptive strategies as underlying mechanisms in psychopathology (Kelly et al, 2012;Min et al, 2013). Again, even a transdiagnostic perspective that emphasizes maladaptive emotion regulation indicates that adaptive emotion regulation strategies matter in particular circumstances , 2012a, 2012b.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 80%
“…Past research has given adaptive strategies a less predominant role in psychopathology when compared with maladaptive strategies (Aldao & NolenHoeksema, 2010;Domínguez-Sánchez et al, 2013), while other studies have demonstrated the opposite (Kelly et al, 2012;Min et al, 2013). One main strong point of our research is that we compared differences in a wide range of symptoms while analyzing a diversity of adaptive and maladaptive strategies.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 89%
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“…, realizaron un estudio con pacientes con depresión y/o trastornos de ansiedad, en el que identificaron como la baja espiritualidad era un predictor importante de los grupos de menor resiliencia; el bajo propósito en la vida, el escaso el ejercicio físico y el rasgo de ansiedad severa se asociaron con los grupos de baja y media resiliencia. Otro estudio, realizado en 2013, sobre pacientes con depresión, concluyó, después de controlar por edad, género, estado civil, depresión y ansiedad, que un mayor uso del reenfoque en la planificación y reevaluación positiva, así como un menor uso de la rumia predicen mejores puntuaciones en resiliencia (Min, Yu, Lee, & Chae, 2013). También, la resiliencia, la ansiedad rasgo, y su interacción predicen significativamente la respuesta al tratamiento después de ajustar por la edad y la duración del tratamiento; así niveles bajos de ansiedad rasgo y niveles altos de resiliencia podrían contribuir a una mejor respuesta al tratamiento en pacientes deprimidos .…”
Section: Resiliencia Y Salud Mentalunclassified
“…Patients with improved resilience were found to yield better treatment outcomes than patients with non-resilience focused treatment plans (Min, Yu, Lee, & Chae, 2013). Cognitive distortions are thoughts that involuntarily appear in person, which maintain negative consequences in their emotion; also known as negative automatic thoughts (Dobson, 2010).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%