Asnaani Anu, Tyler Jeremy, McCann Jesse, Brown Lily, Zang Yinyin
University of Utah, Department of Psychology, 380 S 1530 E Behavioral Sciences Building, Salt Lake City, UT, United States 84112.
University of Pennsylvania, Department of Psychiatry, Center for the Treatment and Study of Anxiety, 3535 Market St, Suite 600 North, Philadelphia, PA, United States 19104.
J Affect Disord. 2020 Apr 15;267:86-95. doi: 10.1016/j.jad.2020.01.160. Epub 2020 Jan 28.
Numerous randomized controlled trials (RCTs) have examined the efficacy of cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) in reducing anxiety symptoms. However, relatively fewer studies have examined the effectiveness of CBT in naturalistic treatment settings. There is even less known about the mechanisms underlying successful outcomes in naturalistic samples receiving CBT. This study aimed to examine the absolute and relative mediation of emotion regulation (ER) difficulties and anxiety sensitivity (AS) on anxiety symptom reduction.
Participants were treatment-seeking patients (N = 247) at an outpatient anxiety clinic. Measures of difficulties in ER, AS, and disorder specific symptoms were administered at baseline, mid, and post-treatment. A composite anxiety score was calculated to measure anxiety disorder symptom severity across anxiety-related diagnoses.
Individual mediation models revealed that both AS and ER significantly mediated the reduction in anxiety-related symptoms over the course of treatment. A multiple mediation model found that ER was the strongest mediator (indirect effect = -1.030, 95% CI = -2.172 to -0.153). Further analyses revealed that the ER subscale of impulse control difficulties (e.g., the tendency to avoid when confronted with a feared stimulus) was the strongest mediator (indirect effect = -0.849, 95% CI = -1.913 to -0.081).
This study relied solely on self-report measures of ER, AS, and anxiety pathology, and did not have a control group.
These results suggest that improvement in the ability to control impulses may act as a mechanism of anxiety symptom reduction and may be important to target in CBT with naturalistic samples.
众多随机对照试验(RCT)已检验了认知行为疗法(CBT)在减轻焦虑症状方面的疗效。然而,相对较少的研究考察了CBT在自然主义治疗环境中的有效性。对于接受CBT的自然主义样本中成功治疗结果背后的机制,人们了解得更少。本研究旨在考察情绪调节(ER)困难和焦虑敏感性(AS)对焦虑症状减轻的绝对和相对中介作用。
参与者为一家门诊焦虑诊所中寻求治疗的患者(N = 247)。在基线、治疗中期和治疗后对ER困难、AS以及特定障碍症状进行测量。计算综合焦虑评分以衡量焦虑症相关诊断中焦虑障碍症状的严重程度。
个体中介模型显示,AS和ER在治疗过程中均显著中介了焦虑相关症状的减轻。多重中介模型发现,ER是最强的中介因素(间接效应 = -1.030,95%置信区间 = -2.172至-0.153)。进一步分析表明,冲动控制困难的ER子量表(例如,面对恐惧刺激时的回避倾向)是最强的中介因素(间接效应 = -0.849,95%置信区间 = -1.913至-0.081)。
本研究仅依赖于ER、AS和焦虑病理学的自我报告测量,且没有对照组。
这些结果表明,冲动控制能力的改善可能是焦虑症状减轻的一种机制,并且在针对自然主义样本的CBT中可能是重要的干预靶点。