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Excessive Reassurance Seeking: Delineating a Risk Factor Involved in the Development of Depressive Symptoms
266
Citations
23
References
2001
Year
Psychological Co-morbiditiesMental HealthSpecific Vulnerability FactorPsychologySocial SciencesMood SymptomStressRisk Factor InvolvedClinical PsychologyConstruct ValidityDepressive SymptomsBehavioral SciencesPsychiatryDepressionExcessive Reassurance SeekingPsychosocial FactorSocial StressPsychosocial ResearchMedicinePsychopathology
Six studies investigated (a) the construct validity of reassurance seeking and (b) reassurance seeking as a specific vulnerability factor for depressive symptoms. Studies 1 and 2 demonstrated that reassurance seeking is a reasonably cohesive, replicable, and valid construct, discernible from related interpersonal variables. Study 3 demonstrated that reassurance seeking displayed diagnostic specificity to depression, whereas other interpersonal variables did not, in a sample of clinically diagnosed participants. Study 4 prospectively assessed a group of initially symptom-free participants, and showed that those who developed future depressive symptoms (as compared with those who remained symptom-free) obtained elevated reassurance-seeking scores at baseline, when all participants were symptom-free, but did not obtain elevated scores on other interpersonal variables. Studies 5 and 6 indicate that reassurance seeking predicts future depressive reactions to stress. Taken together, the six studies support the construct validity of reassurance seeking, as well as its potential role as a specific vulnerability factor for depression.
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