Abstract

Mixture modeling technics are not the one and only to perform person-centered analyses, but they do offer the possibility of integrating latent profiles into models of some complexity that include antecedents and results. When analyzing the contribution of socioemotional resources to the preservation of mental health, it is the variable-centered approaches that are the most often performed, with few examples using a person-centered approach. Moreover, if the focus is on the Arab adolescent population, to our knowledge, there is an absence of such studies. This study aims to extend the research about socioemotional resources by examining: (1) if distinguishable profiles can be identified based on scores about perceptions of different emotional abilities and levels of social support from different sources (e.g., parents, friends, and teachers/counselors); (2) if the identified profiles relate to mental health indicators, such as depression levels and health-related quality of life (HRQoL); and (3) to acknowledge if sociodemographic variables such as age or gender and positive self-views (self-esteem) ascertain the probability of pertaining to the identified profiles. The study was carried out on a large sample of Moroccan adolescents (N = 970). We adopted a person-centered approach using latent profile analysis (LPA) to establish whether different socioemotional resources profiles (e.g., emotional intelligence and social support) are present in Moroccan adolescents. Furthermore, we investigated the role of sociodemographic variables and self-esteem as antecedents of these profiles and the association of these profiles with mental health (depression and HRQoL). Results from LPA revealed three patterns of socioemotional resources (i.e., latent profiles): (1) “High socioemotional resources” (43.09%); (2) “Moderate socioemotional resources” (42.68%); and (3) “Low socioemotional resources” (14.23%). Analyses showed that Moroccan adolescents differed significantly in depression (cognitive-affective and somatic dimensions) and HRQoL depending on the profile membership. Profiles with higher levels of resources contributed positively to preserving mental health. Finally, the results show that self-esteem boosted the probability of pertaining to the profiles related to better mental health. Thus, this study extends previous research about socioemotional resources, highlighting that researchers and health professionals should consider empirically identified profiles of adolescents when explaining mental health outcomes. Therefore, the psychological intervention should be focused on enhancing the self-esteem of adolescents, to favor a high socioemotional resource profile, which results in better mental health.

Highlights

  • Socioemotional resources have numerous benefits for the mental health of adolescents

  • This study addresses different profiles of Moroccan adolescents considering emotional intelligence (EI) and social support (SS) to test their impact on mental health and health-related quality of life (HRQoL) as outcomes, as well as the effect that self-esteem, age, and gender have as antecedents of the profiles

  • We considered a person-centered approach in which the focus is on the individuals instead of the variables

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Summary

Introduction

Socioemotional resources have numerous benefits for the mental health of adolescents. Some research considering a person-centered approach, which assumes that there may be diverse unobserved subgroups within a population group and that some relationships among variables may vary across subgroups (Morin et al, 2018), have paid attention to adolescents, mainly regarding their mental health problems in relation to their academic success (Yu et al, 2018; Gonzálvez et al, 2021), their expectations about the university (Araújo et al, 2018), or their socioemotional problems (i.e., alcohol; Fonseca-Pedrero et al, 2020). Given the necessity to identify protective/risk factors in adolescents (Oropesa et al, 2014), there is a need of deepening on variables that may act as antecedents of mental health, as socioemotional resources named EI and SS, in Arab adolescents, such as Moroccan adolescents, as there is no study addressing this issue. Acknowledgment of adolescents’ profiles regarding these variables could help academics and practitioners to establish intervention programs to improve the mental health of adolescents’

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