The impact of emotion regulation therapy on emotion differentiation in psychologically distressed caregivers of cancer patients

Mai B Mikkelsen, Emma Elkjær, Douglas S Mennin, David M Fresco, Robert Zachariae, Allison Applebaum, Mia S O'Toole, Mai B Mikkelsen, Emma Elkjær, Douglas S Mennin, David M Fresco, Robert Zachariae, Allison Applebaum, Mia S O'Toole

Abstract

Background and objectives: Emotion differentiation is considered adaptive because differentiated emotional experiences are believed to promote access to the information that emotions carry, enabling context-appropriate emotion regulation. In the present study, secondary analyses from a recent randomized controlled trial (O'Toole et al., 2019) were conducted to investigate whether emotion differentiation can improve as a result of psychotherapy and whether improvements in emotion differentiation are associated with reduced distress.

Design and methods: A total of 81 distressed caregivers of cancer patients were randomized to Emotion Regulation Therapy (ERT), an intervention aimed at improving emotion differentiation and facilitating healthy emotion regulation, or a waitlist condition. Emotion differentiation scores could be calculated for 54 caregivers.

Results: Repeated measures ANOVAs revealed that ERT led to significant improvements in negative (η2 = 0.21, p = .012), but not positive emotion differentiation (η2 = <0.01, p = .973). Correlation analyses showed that improvements in negative emotion differentiation were not associated with changes in distress.

Conclusions: The results suggest that negative emotion differentiation can improve as a result of psychotherapy. Further research is needed to clarify how improvements in emotion differentiation following therapeutic interventions relate to treatment outcomes such as distress.Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT02322905.

Keywords: Emotion; cancer; caregiver; emotion differentiation; emotion regulation therapy.

Conflict of interest statement

Disclosure of interest: The authors report no conflicts of interest.

Source: PubMed

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