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Negative affective spillover from daily events predicts early response to cognitive therapy for depression.
38
Citations
36
References
2008
Year
PsychotherapyEarly ResponseAffective NeuroscienceMental HealthSocial SciencesPsychologyMood SymptomNegative AffectCognitive TherapyNegative Affective SpilloverPsychiatryDepressionAffective SpilloverPsychiatric DisorderMultilevel ModelingNa ReactivityDaily EventsMood SpectrumMood DisordersMedicinePsychopathology
This study evaluated the predictive role of depressed outpatients' (N = 62) affective reactivity to daily stressors in their rates of improvement in cognitive therapy (CT). For 1 week before treatment, patients completed nightly electronic diaries that assessed daily stressors and negative affect (NA). The authors used multilevel modeling to compute each patient's within-day relationship between daily stressors and daily NA (within-day reactivity), as well as the relationship between daily stressors and next-day NA (next-day reactivity; affective spillover). In growth model analyses, the authors evaluated the predictive role of patients' NA reactivity in their early (Sessions 1-4) and late (Sessions 5-12) response to CT. Within-day NA reactivity did not predict early or late response to CT. However, next-day reactivity predicted early response to CT, such that patients who had greater NA spillover in response to negative events had a slower rate of symptom change during the first 4 sessions. Affective spillover did not influence later response to CT. The findings suggest that depressed patients who have difficulty bouncing back the next day from their NA reactions to a relative increase in daily negative events will respond less quickly to the early sessions of CT.
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