| Literature DB >> 29049292 |
Jannika De Rubeis1, Ricardo G Lugo2, Michael Witthöft3, Stefan Sütterlin4,5, Markus R Pawelzik6, Claus Vögele1,7.
Abstract
Consistent across time and cultures, men and male adolescents older than 14 years of age appear underrepresented in mood disorders, and are far less likely than women to seek psychological help. The much higher rate of suicide amongst males suggests that depression in men might be underreported. One of the core human motives is to seek acceptance by others and avoid rejection. Rejection Sensitivity (RS) has been conceptualized as the cognitive-affective processing disposition to anxiously expect, readily perceive, and intensely respond to cues of rejection in the behavior of others. RS has been previously linked with the onset and course of depression, but-as yet-has not been investigated longitudinally in a clinical population. We investigated the predictive role of RS to symptom deterioration 6 months after end-of- treatment in 72 male inpatients with depressive spectrum disorder. The BDI was administered at intake, end-of-treatment and 6 month follow-up. RS scores were obtained at intake. Rejection Sensitivity had additional predictive power on BDI scores at 6 months follow-up controlling for BDI scores at end-of-treatment (ΔR2 = .095). The results are discussed in terms of the importance of targeting RS during treatment, and highlight the fact that therapeutic follow-up care is paramount. Future research should investigate possible mediators of the RS-relapse-to-depression association, such as self-blame, rumination, neuroticism, pessimism, emotion dysregulation, and low self-esteem.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29049292 PMCID: PMC5648166 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0185802
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Participant characteristics: Means and standard deviations.
| M | SD | |
|---|---|---|
| Age | 42.86 | 13.33 |
| Treatment duration (days) | 76.61 | 44.27 |
| Number of mental disorders diagnosed per patient | 2.61 | 1.26 |
Participant characteristics: Frequencies.
| % | |
|---|---|
| Vocational schooling | 15.3 |
| Secondary School | 19.4 |
| College preparatory schools | 20.8 |
| University degree | 38.9 |
| Missing data | 5.6 |
| married | 40.3 |
| married but separated | 4.2 |
| single | 33.3 |
| Living with partner | 6.9 |
| divorced | 9.7 |
| Missing data | 5.6 |
| recurrent Major Depressive Disorder | 49.9 |
| double depression | 16.7 |
| Major Depressive Disorder, single episode | 29.2 |
| Dysthymic Disorder | 4.2 |
| Personality Disorder | 43.0 |
| Anxiety Disorder | 28.0 |
| Attention Deficit Disorder | 16.7 |
| Eating Disorders | 6.0 |
| Obsessive Compulsive Disorders | 8.0 |
| Post-Traumatic-Stress Disorder | 4.0 |
| Somatization Disorder | 6.0 |
Rejection sensitivity and depression scores.
| Intake | End-of-treatment | 6 month follow-up | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| M | SD | M | SD | M | SD | |
| ARSQ | 11.56 | 6.20 | 9.75 | 5.35 | - | - |
| BDI | 20.71 | 9.68 | 8.50 | 7.54 | 12.24 | 11.43 |
ARSQ = Adult Rejection Sensitivity Questionnaire; BDI = Beck’s Depression Inventory
Pearson's correlations.
| BDI at discharge | BDI at 6 month follow-up | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| r | p | r | |
| Age | -.060 | .614 | -.117 |
| Treatment duration | .181 | .129 | .220 |
r = two tailed; Treatment duration refers to days of treatment.
Fig 1Rejection sensitivtiy predicts depressive symptom deterioration.
Dependent variable: BDI at 6 month follow up; Dashed lines = CI (95%). In order to rule out the possible influences of a comorbid PD diagnosis, we repeated the analyses without patients with a PD and found the results to remain unchanged (ΔR2 = .105; β = .325; t = 2.616; p = .013; R2 = .417; R2corr. = .386; F(2) = 13.57, p < .001).