Autor: |
Ericson, Stacey Michelle, Gallagher, Joshua Paul, Federico, Alicia Josephine, Fleming, Joshua James, Froggatt, Daniel, Eleid, Adel, Finn, Bridget Mary, Johnston, Kim, Cai, Ru Ying |
Předmět: |
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Zdroj: |
Journal of Health Psychology; Jul2024, Vol. 29 Issue 8, p863-876, 14p |
Abstrakt: |
Subjective well-being influences mental and physical health. Fortunately, interventions exist to improve people's subjective well-being. Emotion regulation and self-compassion are two transdiagnostic factors that impact mental health and have been separately shown to be associated with subjective well-being. However, their combined relationship with subjective well-being has not yet been examined. To address this gap, the current novel study aimed to determine if there is a combined relationship between self-compassion, emotion regulation, and dimensions of subjective well-being cross-sectionally in adults living in the United States. Participants (n = 559; 50% female; M age = 57.70 years) completed an online survey via Prime Panels from CloudResearch, capturing their responses on the interested constructs. Analyses showed that emotion regulation significantly mediated the relationships between self-compassion and various subjective well-being dimensions, specifically, positive affect (d = 0.32), negative affect (d = 1.17), and eudemonic well-being (d = 0.79). Our findings have both clinical and research implications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |
Databáze: |
Complementary Index |
Externí odkaz: |
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