Research School of Psychology, Australian National University.
Centre for Mental Health Research, School of Population Health, Australian National University.
Emotion. 2021 Oct;21(7):1511-1521. doi: 10.1037/emo0001018. Epub 2021 Nov 29.
Previous work has generally conceptualized emotion regulation as contributing to mental health outcomes, and not vice versa. The present study challenges this assumption by using a prospective design to investigate the directionality of underlying relationships between emotion regulation and mental health in the context of a major population-level stressor. We surveyed a large nationally representative sample of adults (18-91 years, = 704) at three 1-month intervals across the acute lockdown phase of the COVID-19 pandemic in Australia, using standardized measures of depression and anxiety symptoms. At each time point, we also measured the use of two emotion regulation strategies-cognitive reappraisal and emotional suppression-previously associated with adaptive and maladaptive mental health outcomes, respectively. We found cognitive reappraisal was unrelated to mental health symptoms. In contrast, greater emotional suppression was robustly associated with higher symptom levels for both depression and anxiety. Longitudinal analyses revealed this association reflected bidirectional relationships. Higher symptoms of depression and anxiety each predicted greater subsequent use of emotional suppression, and greater use of emotional suppression predicted higher subsequent symptoms. This bidirectionality suggests emotional suppression is both symptomatic and predictive of psychological distress. The lack of a relationship for cognitive reappraisal is discussed with respect to the pandemic context and evidence that high stress might reduce people's ability to use this strategy effectively. Given the strong emphasis on reappraisal in clinical practice, there is a critical need to understand for whom, what and when this strategy is helpful. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).
先前的研究普遍认为情绪调节有助于心理健康结果,而不是相反。本研究通过使用前瞻性设计,在 COVID-19 大流行的急性封锁阶段,在澳大利亚对大量具有代表性的成年人(18-91 岁,n=704)进行了三次为期一个月的调查,使用抑郁和焦虑症状的标准化测量来检验情绪调节和心理健康之间的关系的方向性。在每个时间点,我们还测量了两种先前与适应性和适应性不良心理健康结果相关的情绪调节策略的使用情况——认知重评和情绪抑制。我们发现认知重评与心理健康症状无关。相比之下,情绪抑制与抑郁和焦虑的症状水平更高呈更强的相关性。纵向分析显示,这种关联反映了双向关系。抑郁和焦虑症状的升高都预示着随后情绪抑制的使用会增加,而情绪抑制的增加则预示着随后症状的增加。这种双向关系表明情绪抑制既是症状性的,也是心理困扰的预测指标。对于认知重评没有关系的情况,我们根据大流行背景和高压力可能降低人们有效使用这种策略的能力的证据进行了讨论。鉴于在临床实践中对重评的强烈强调,我们迫切需要了解对于哪些人、什么情况下以及何时这种策略是有帮助的。