Objective Despite the well-documented relationship between emotion dysregulation and both post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and alcohol use disorder symptoms, no studies investigated this issue in the context of the outbreak. Moreover, additional research investi-gating the role of mediators intervening in these pathways is required. Dissociation and emotional beliefs are two factors that may ex-plain such relationships. However, a poor number of studies empirically tested their role.Methods A cross-sectional study on a sample of 719 community participants (32.5% males; Mage=34.36, standard deviation=14.38 years) was conducted. Participants fulfilled a battery of self-report questionnaires measuring levels of PTSD outbreak-related symptoms, alcohol use disorder, emotion dysregulation, emotional beliefs, and dissociation.Results Partial r-Pearson correlations showed that PTSD symptoms' level was positively and significantly related to all variables inves-tigated in the study whereas alcohol use disorder level was positively and significantly associated with emotion dysregulation and only some dimension of emotional beliefs and dissociation. Results drawn from a structural equation model highlight the mediating role of both emotional belief and dissociation in the relationship linking emotion dysregulation and alcohol use disorder whereas only dissocia-tion, but not emotional beliefs, mediated the link between emotion dysregulation and PTSD symptoms. Conclusion Most of the hypotheses have been supported stressing the relevance of both dissociation and emotional beliefs in PTSD and alcohol use disorder symptoms. These two variables appear important framework from which deepen the impact of emotion dys-regulation in psychopathology. Psychiatry Investig 2022;19(10):803-813

Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder and Alcohol Use Disorder During the COVID-19 Outbreak: Do Dissociation and Emotional Metacognitive Beliefs Mediate the Role of Emotion Dysregulation?

Rogier, Guyonne;Zobel, Sara Beomonte;Velotti, Patrizia
2022-01-01

Abstract

Objective Despite the well-documented relationship between emotion dysregulation and both post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and alcohol use disorder symptoms, no studies investigated this issue in the context of the outbreak. Moreover, additional research investi-gating the role of mediators intervening in these pathways is required. Dissociation and emotional beliefs are two factors that may ex-plain such relationships. However, a poor number of studies empirically tested their role.Methods A cross-sectional study on a sample of 719 community participants (32.5% males; Mage=34.36, standard deviation=14.38 years) was conducted. Participants fulfilled a battery of self-report questionnaires measuring levels of PTSD outbreak-related symptoms, alcohol use disorder, emotion dysregulation, emotional beliefs, and dissociation.Results Partial r-Pearson correlations showed that PTSD symptoms' level was positively and significantly related to all variables inves-tigated in the study whereas alcohol use disorder level was positively and significantly associated with emotion dysregulation and only some dimension of emotional beliefs and dissociation. Results drawn from a structural equation model highlight the mediating role of both emotional belief and dissociation in the relationship linking emotion dysregulation and alcohol use disorder whereas only dissocia-tion, but not emotional beliefs, mediated the link between emotion dysregulation and PTSD symptoms. Conclusion Most of the hypotheses have been supported stressing the relevance of both dissociation and emotional beliefs in PTSD and alcohol use disorder symptoms. These two variables appear important framework from which deepen the impact of emotion dys-regulation in psychopathology. Psychiatry Investig 2022;19(10):803-813
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11567/1103282
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