Abstract

Background: The importance of both specific emotion regulation strategies and overall deficits in emotion regulation in the context of psychopathology is widely recognized. Besides alleviating psychological symptoms, improving mental well-being is increasingly considered important in treatment of people with mental disorders. However, no comprehensive meta-analysis on the relationship between emotion regulation and well-being in people with mental disorders has been conducted yet.Objective: The aim of the current study was to synthesize and meta-analyze evidence regarding the relationship between emotion regulation and well-being in clinical samples across studies.Method: A systematic literature search was conducted in PsycINFO, PubMed and Scopus and 94 cross-sectional effect sizes from 35 studies were meta-analyzed to explore this relationship. To be eligible for the meta-analysis, studies had to include a clinical sample, assess at least one specific emotion regulation strategy or overall deficits in emotion regulation and include well-being as outcome.Results: The findings showed significant small to moderate negative relationships with well-being for the strategies avoidance (r = −0.31) and rumination (r = −0.19) and positive relationships with reappraisal (r = 0.19) and acceptance (r = 0.42). Grouping together putative adaptive and maladaptive strategies revealed similar sized relationships with well-being in the expected direction. Overall deficits in emotion regulation showed a negative moderate correlation with well-being (r = −0.47). No substantial difference in relationships was found when clustering studies into hedonic and eudaimonic well-being.Conclusion: Our findings suggest that emotion regulation is not merely related with psychopathology, but also with well-being in general as well as hedonic and eudaimonic well-being. Therefore, it might also be important to improve emotion regulation when aiming to improve well-being in people with mental disorders.

Highlights

  • Emotion regulation is the way in which individuals modulate the intensity and duration of positive or negative affective states consciously and nonconsciously in order to achieve a certain goal [1,2]

  • on page # Identify the report as a systematic review

  • Processes of emotion regulation have widely been recognized as transdiagnostic factor for numerous psychological disorders

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Emotion regulation is the way in which individuals modulate the intensity and duration of positive or negative affective states consciously and nonconsciously in order to achieve a certain goal [1,2]. Emotion regulation is defined as a set of specific strategies people may use to alter their emotional experiences This conceptualization has been used in a wide range of empirical studies to examine the role of specific strategies in the context of psychological disorders [18,19,20]. The importance of both specific emotion regulation strategies and overall deficits in emotion regulation in the context of psychopathology is widely recognized. It might be important to improve emotion regulation when aiming to improve well-being in people with mental disorders

Objectives
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call