Associations of negative cognitions, emotional regulation, and depression symptoms across four continents: International support for the cognitive model of depression

Abstract Background Cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) is one of the most widely tested and empirically supported psychological treatments for depression. Beck and other scholars established the theoretical foundations of CBT among North American populations, yet surprisingly few studies have examin...

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Main Authors: Saghar Chahar Mahali, Shadi Beshai, Justin R. Feeney, Sandeep Mishra
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-01-01
Series:BMC Psychiatry
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12888-019-2423-x
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spelling doaj-1d662389c992421695398c1ddd7fb81b2021-01-17T12:54:23ZengBMCBMC Psychiatry1471-244X2020-01-0120111210.1186/s12888-019-2423-xAssociations of negative cognitions, emotional regulation, and depression symptoms across four continents: International support for the cognitive model of depressionSaghar Chahar Mahali0Shadi Beshai1Justin R. Feeney2Sandeep Mishra3Department of Psychology, University of ReginaDepartment of Psychology, University of ReginaFaculty of Business Administration, University of ReginaDepartment of Management, Lang School of Business and Economics, University of GuelphAbstract Background Cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) is one of the most widely tested and empirically supported psychological treatments for depression. Beck and other scholars established the theoretical foundations of CBT among North American populations, yet surprisingly few studies have examined central hypotheses of the cognitive model of depression among people living in non-Western regions. Methods In the present study, we used the alignment method to minimize measurement bias to examine several central hypotheses of the cognitive model among adults living on four continents (n = 752): North America (n = 103; female = 29.1%), Europe (n = 404; female = 36.4%), South America (n = 108; female = 18.5%), and Asia (n = 136; female = 19.9%). Results Depressive symptoms were positively and strongly correlated with negative automatic thoughts about self (ATQ-N), and moderately associated with dysfunctional attitudes (DAS) among people living on the four continents. Further, use of emotional suppression strategies to regulate emotion (ERQ-Suppression) was moderately and positively associated with depressive symptoms among people on all four continents, while use of cognitive-reappraisal (ERQ-Reappraisal) was not systematically associated with depressive symptoms. Conclusions Results of this study offer preliminary cross-continental support for foundational hypotheses of the cognitive model of depression. Negative thoughts appear to be associated with depression in all regions of the world, cementing this construct as a hallmark feature of the disorder.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12888-019-2423-xDepressionNegative automatic thoughtsDysfunctional attitudesCultureAlignment methodEmotion regulation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Saghar Chahar Mahali
Shadi Beshai
Justin R. Feeney
Sandeep Mishra
spellingShingle Saghar Chahar Mahali
Shadi Beshai
Justin R. Feeney
Sandeep Mishra
Associations of negative cognitions, emotional regulation, and depression symptoms across four continents: International support for the cognitive model of depression
BMC Psychiatry
Depression
Negative automatic thoughts
Dysfunctional attitudes
Culture
Alignment method
Emotion regulation
author_facet Saghar Chahar Mahali
Shadi Beshai
Justin R. Feeney
Sandeep Mishra
author_sort Saghar Chahar Mahali
title Associations of negative cognitions, emotional regulation, and depression symptoms across four continents: International support for the cognitive model of depression
title_short Associations of negative cognitions, emotional regulation, and depression symptoms across four continents: International support for the cognitive model of depression
title_full Associations of negative cognitions, emotional regulation, and depression symptoms across four continents: International support for the cognitive model of depression
title_fullStr Associations of negative cognitions, emotional regulation, and depression symptoms across four continents: International support for the cognitive model of depression
title_full_unstemmed Associations of negative cognitions, emotional regulation, and depression symptoms across four continents: International support for the cognitive model of depression
title_sort associations of negative cognitions, emotional regulation, and depression symptoms across four continents: international support for the cognitive model of depression
publisher BMC
series BMC Psychiatry
issn 1471-244X
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Abstract Background Cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) is one of the most widely tested and empirically supported psychological treatments for depression. Beck and other scholars established the theoretical foundations of CBT among North American populations, yet surprisingly few studies have examined central hypotheses of the cognitive model of depression among people living in non-Western regions. Methods In the present study, we used the alignment method to minimize measurement bias to examine several central hypotheses of the cognitive model among adults living on four continents (n = 752): North America (n = 103; female = 29.1%), Europe (n = 404; female = 36.4%), South America (n = 108; female = 18.5%), and Asia (n = 136; female = 19.9%). Results Depressive symptoms were positively and strongly correlated with negative automatic thoughts about self (ATQ-N), and moderately associated with dysfunctional attitudes (DAS) among people living on the four continents. Further, use of emotional suppression strategies to regulate emotion (ERQ-Suppression) was moderately and positively associated with depressive symptoms among people on all four continents, while use of cognitive-reappraisal (ERQ-Reappraisal) was not systematically associated with depressive symptoms. Conclusions Results of this study offer preliminary cross-continental support for foundational hypotheses of the cognitive model of depression. Negative thoughts appear to be associated with depression in all regions of the world, cementing this construct as a hallmark feature of the disorder.
topic Depression
Negative automatic thoughts
Dysfunctional attitudes
Culture
Alignment method
Emotion regulation
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12888-019-2423-x
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