| Literature DB >> 30115039 |
Mary Gemma Cherry1, Peter James Taylor2,3, Stephen Lloyd Brown4, William Sellwood5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Expressed emotion (EE) is a global index of familial emotional climate, which is comprised of emotional over-involvement (EOI) and critical comments (CC)/hostility. Although EE is an established predictor of negative outcomes for both people with long-term mental health difficulties and their family carers, its psychological underpinnings remain relatively poorly understood. This paper examined associations between attachment, mentalisation ability and aspects of EE.Entities:
Keywords: Attachment; Carers; Criticism; Cross-sectional; Emotional over-involvement; Expressed emotion; Hostility; Mentalisation; Quantitative
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30115039 PMCID: PMC6097417 DOI: 10.1186/s12888-018-1842-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Psychiatry ISSN: 1471-244X Impact factor: 3.630
Fig. 1Figurative summary of mediational hypotheses
Demographic data (n = 106)
| Demographic Variable | ||
|---|---|---|
| Carers | Service-users | |
| Age (years), | 47.13 (13.49), 22-87a | 42.76 (17.64), 18–92b |
| Gender | ||
| Male | 19 (17.92) | 57 (53.77) |
| Female | 86 (81.13) | 44 (41.51) |
| Not stated | 1 (0.94) | 5 (4.72) |
| Ethnicity | ||
| Caucasian | 94 (88.68) | 96 (90.57) |
| South Asian | 4 (3.77) | 3 (2.83) |
| Other Asian background | 1 (0.94) | 2 (1.89) |
| Mixed background | 1 (0.94) | 1 (0.94) |
| Other | 4 (3.77) | 3 (2.83) |
| Not stated | 2 (1.89) | 1 (0.94) |
| Employment status | ||
| Employed | 63 (59.43) | 22 (20.75) |
| Not currently in paid employment | 15 (14.15) | 47 (44.34) |
| Student | 2 (1.89) | 8 (7.55) |
| Retired | 15 (14.15) | 17 (16.04) |
| Other | 10 (9.43) | 8 (7.55) |
| Not stated | 1 (0.94) | 4 (3.77) |
| Relationship to service-usere | ||
| Partner/spouse | 35 (33.02) | n/a |
| Parent | 8 (7.55) | n/a |
| Child | 13 (12.26) | n/a |
| Other | 5 (4.72) | n/a |
| Not stated | 45 (42.45) | n/a |
| Weekly care provision (hours) | ||
| 10–14 | 18 (16.98) | n/a |
| 15–29 | 21 (19.81) | n/a |
| 30–44 | 17 (16.04) | n/a |
| 45–59 | 2 (1.89) | n/a |
| 60–74 | 5 (4.72) | n/a |
| ≥75 | 29 (27.36) | n/a |
| Not stated | 14 (13.21) | n/a |
| Duration of caregiving (years), | 11.46 (9.66), 1-45c | n/a |
| Duration of difficulties (years), | n/a | 12.76 (10.91). 1-50d |
| Diagnosis, | ||
| Affective disorder only | n/a | 56 (52.83) |
| ED only | n/a | 6 (5.66) |
| SSD only | n/a | 16 (15.09) |
| PD only | n/a | 2 (1.89) |
| Affective disorder and SSD | n/a | 8 (7.55) |
| Affective disorder and PD | n/a | 5 (4.72) |
| Affective disorder and ED | n/a | 10 (9.43) |
| Not stated | n/a | 3 (2.83) |
| Additional comorbid difficulties, | n/a | |
| None | n/a | 48 (45.28) |
| Physical health difficulties | n/a | 44 (41.51) |
| Substance misuse difficulties | n/a | 1 (0.94) |
| Attentional/neurological difficulties | n/a | 4 (3.77) |
| Physical health and attentional/neurological difficulties | n/a | 1 (0.94) |
| Substance misuse and attentional/neurological difficulties | n/a | 2 (1.89) |
| Not stated | n/a | 6 (5.66) |
Note: all information provided by carers
ED eating disorders, M mean, n/a not applicable, PD personality disorders, SD standard deviation, SSD schizophrenia spectrum disorders
an = 105
bn = 104
cn = 105
dn = 101
erelationship data were not available for 45 participants due to an online data collection error
Fig. 2Flowchart of participant inclusion
Descriptive and bivariate statistics
| Variable | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Total EE | 57.19 (8.45), 38–75 | – | |||||||||
| 2 | EOI | 28.00 (5.07), 17–38 | .92** | – | ||||||||
| 3 | CC/hostility | 29.19 (4.31), 20–38 | .89** | .63** | – | |||||||
| 4 | Attachment avoidance | 19.80 (7.01), 6–40 | .33** | .22 | .40** | – | ||||||
| 5 | Attachment anxiety | 21.70 (7.29), 6–36 | .16 | .11 | .17 | .15 | – | |||||
| 6 | RMET | 25.09 (3.96), 13–34 | −.20 | −.15 | −.23* | −.31** | −.02 | – | ||||
| 7 | E1 | 30.42 (8.96), 10–50 | −.03 | −.07 | .02 | −.03 | −.12 | .03 | – | |||
| 8 | E2 | 20.56 (5.51), 6–30 | .11 | .11 | .09 | −.09 | −.09 | .18 | .67** | – | ||
| 9 | E3 | 27.41 (6.85), 8–40 | .09 | .03 | .21 | .04 | −.10 | −.05 | .75** | .58** | – | |
| 10 | E4 | 9.88 (3.19), 3–15 | .10 | .02 | .14 | −.01 | −.03 | −.02 | .70** | .67** | .73** | – |
Note: n = 82 (correlational analyses); italicised values indicate Pearson’s product-moment correlation coefficient; non-italicised values indicate Spearman’s Rho values
CC critical comments, E1 Using and managing your own emotions subscale, E2 Identifying and understanding your own emotions subscale, E3 Dealing with emotions in others subscale, E4 Perceiving emotion through facial expression and body language subscale, ECR:SF Experiences in Close Relationships: Short Form, EE Expressed Emotion, EOI emotional over-involvement, ESES Emotional Self-Efficacy Scale, FQ Family Questionnaire, M mean, RMET Reading the Mind in the Eyes Test, SD standard deviation
* = significant at p < .05; ** = significant at p < .01
Hierarchical multiple linear regression models showing predictors of CC/Hostility
| Variable | Cumulative | Simultaneous | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| R2 | ∆R2 | B | β | 95% CI for B | |||
| Model 1: Demographic Characteristics, Attachment and Mentalisation as Predictors of CC/Hostility ( | |||||||
| Step 1 | Carers’ gender | .44 | .42 | −.58 | −.06 | −2.18 to 1.03 | |
| Service-users’ age | −.05 | −.24** | −.09 to −.01 | ||||
| EOI | .41 | .51** | .27 to.54 | ||||
| Step 2 | Attachment anxiety | .60 | .54 | .02 | .03 | −.07 to.10 | |
| Attachment avoidance | .11 | .20** | .02 to.21 | ||||
| RMET | −.10 | −.09 | −.28 to.08 | ||||
| E1 | −.12 | −.26 | −.24 to.00 | ||||
| E2 | −.05 | −.07 | −.22 to.12 | ||||
| E3 | .16 | .28* | .01 to.32 | ||||
| E4 | .27 | .22 | −.08 to.61 | ||||
| Model 2: Service-Users’ Age, EOI, Attachment Avoidance and Understanding Others’ Emotions as Predictors of CC/Hostility ( | |||||||
| Step 1 | Service-users’ age | .38 | .37 | −.04 | −.16 | −.08 to.00 | |
| EOI | .45 | .54** | .31 to.59 | ||||
| Step 2 | Attachment avoidance | .45 | .43 | .12 | .20** | .03 to.22 | |
| E3 | .11 | .18* | .02 to.21 | ||||
Note: * p < .05; ** p < .01; CC critical comments, CI confident interval, E1 Using and managing your own emotions subscale, E2 Identifying and understanding your own emotions subscale, E3 Dealing with emotions in others subscale, E4 Perceiving emotion through facial expression and body language subscale, EOI emotional over-involvement, RMET Reading the Mind in the Eyes Test
Bootstrapping estimates of the total indirect effects of mentalisation variables on the relationships between attachment variables and expressed emotion variables
| Corrected estimate | SE | Lower 95% | Higher 95% | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anxious Attachment - EOI | .0076a | .0479 | −.0918 | .1095 |
| Anxious Attachment - CC/Hostility | −.0168 | .0401 | −.1016 | .0574 |
| Avoidant Attachment - EOI | .0213 | .0330 | −.0517 | .0819 |
| Avoidant Attachment - CC/Hostility | .0213 | .0230 | −.0493 | .0831 |
a Figures are unstandardized beta estimates