Buscar en
International Journal of Clinical and Health Psychology
Toda la web
Inicio International Journal of Clinical and Health Psychology Negative emotions and quality of life among adolescents: A moderated mediation m...
Journal Information
Vol. 20. Issue 2.
Pages 118-125 (May - August 2020)
Visits
7478
Vol. 20. Issue 2.
Pages 118-125 (May - August 2020)
Original article
Open Access
Negative emotions and quality of life among adolescents: A moderated mediation model
Emociones negativas y calidad de vida en adolescentes: un modelo de mediación
Visits
7478
Yaoguo Genga, Jingjing Gua, Xueli Zhua, Minqi Yanga,b,
Corresponding author
minqi_yang@zzu.edu.cn

Corresponding author at: School of Marxism, School of Education, Zhengzhou University, China.
, Dan Shia, Jing Shangb, Fengqing Zhaoa
a School of Education, Zhengzhou University, China
b School of Marxism, Zhengzhou University, China
This item has received

Under a Creative Commons license
Article information
Statistics
Figures (5)
Show moreShow less
Tables (3)
Table 1. Correlations, means and standards deviations of study variables.
Table 2. Summary of bootstrapped mediation analyses of the effects of NES on QoL through resilience.
Table 3. Moderated mediating effect analyses.
Show moreShow less
Abstract
Background/Objective

Depression, anxiety and stress are known as negative emotions. Previous studies have shown that negative emotions were associated with quality of life. There are a lot of researches on quality of life. However, previous studies mainly focused on health-related quality of life among patients. This study aims to examine the relationship between negative emotions and quality of life as well as the underlying psychological mechanism among community-based samples.

Method

We surveyed 6,401 adolescents (age: 9-15 years old). Participants were assessed using the Depression Anxiety Stress Scale, Resilience Scale for Chinese Adolescent, Perceived Social Support Scale and the Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory 4.0 Generic Scale for Negative Emotions, Resilience, Social Support and Quality of Life.

Results

Results revealed that negative emotions were negatively associated with quality of life, and resilience mediated the relationship between negative emotions and quality of life. Social support moderated all the paths among negative emotions, resilience and quality of life.

Conclusions

Adolescents’ quality of life was indirectly affected by negative emotions via resilience, and less affected by negative emotions and more affected by resilience with the improvement of social support. The theoretical and practical implications of these results are discussed.

Keywords:
Negative emotions
Resilience
Social support
Quality of Life
Cross-sectional survey
Resumen
Antececentes/Objetivo

Estrés, ansiedad y depresión son emociones negativas. Estudios previos mostraron que las emociones negativas se asocian con la calidad de vida. Existen numerosas investigaciones centradas en la calidad de vida, sin embargo, los estudios se centran en la calidad de vida de pacientes en relación con su salud. En este estudio se examina la relación entre emociones negativas y calidad de vida, y los mecanismos psicológicos subyacentes.

Método

Encuestamos a 6.401 adolescentes (9-15 años). Los participantes fueron evaluados con la Depression Anxiety Stress Scale, la Resilience Scale for Chinese Adolescent, la Perceived Social Support Scale y el Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory 4.0 Generic Scale for Negative Emotions, Resilience, Social Support and Quality of Life.

Resultados

Las emociones negativas fueron negativamente asociadas con la calidad de vida, y la resiliencia medió la relación entre emociones negativas y calidad de vida. El apoyo social moderó todas las vías entre emociones negativas, resiliencia y calidad de vida.

Conclusiones

La calidad de vida de los adolescentes fue indirectamente afectada por las emociones negativas mediante la resiliencia, menos afectada por emociones negativas y más afectada por la resiliencia con la mejora en el apoyo social. Se discuten las implicaciones teóricas y prácticas de estos resultados.

Palabras clave:
Emociones negativas
Resiliencia
Apoyo social
Calidad de vida
Encuesta transversal
Full Text

Depression, anxiety and stress, the typical negative emotions, are risk factors for adolescents nowadays. In China, 59.2% of Chinese students, reported academic stress (Choi, Lee, & Lee, 2010), 28.6% of adolescents suffered from depressive symptoms (Li, Chen, Zhao, & Xu, 2017). Besides, 7.6% of the Chinese suffered from anxiety disorders in lifetime (Huang et al., 2019). Depression, anxiety and stress had a close relationship with each other (Anyan & Hjemdal, 2016), some scholars claimed that depression, anxiety and stress could be combined into a higher-order mental variable, that is negative emotions (Henry & Crawford, 2005). These negative emotions were closely correlated with many negative outcomes, such as suicidal behavior (Apter, Bleich, Plutchik, Mendelsohn, & Tyano, 1988; Frison & Eggermont, 2016). Psychological researchers have long been interested in identifying negative outcomes that can be caused by depression, anxiety and stress. One of these negative outcomes is quality of life (QoL).

QoL is a multidimensional concept, which is defined as person's perception of his position in life in the context of the cultural and value systems in which person lives and determined in relation to his goals, expectations, standards, and concerns (World Health Organization, 2014), reflecting the individuals’ overall well-being towards physical and mental health (Bevan, Gomez, & Sparks, 2014).

Many studies had indicated that depression, anxiety and stress had a close relationship with QoL (Arraras, Ibanez, Pereda, Iribarren, & Basterra, 2019; Bevan et al., 2014; Dryman, Gardner, Weeks, & Heimberg, 2016; Li et al., 2016). For example, some previous studies had demonstrated that excessive and continuous stress could have a negative effect on students’ health and lead to poor academic performance and illness (Austin, Saklofske, & Mastoras, 2011; Ribeiro, Pereira, Freire, de Oliveira, Casotti, & Boery, 2018; Saklofske, Austin, Mastoras, Beaton, & Osborne, 2012). What’s more, some researches demonstrated that anxiety had a close relationship with poor quality of life (QoL) (Dryman et al., 2016; Li et al., 2016). A recent study showed that depression had a close relationship with the poor QoL (Arraras et al., 2019; Pakpour et al., 2019). Consistently, Siarava et al. (2019) found that depression was a powerful predictor of QoL and individuals with major depression reported lower social well-being (Wersebe et al., 2018), meaning lower quality of life. From the above review, we could conclude that it was apparently that negative emotions (depression, anxiety and stress) had a close association with quality of life, but the underlying mechanism was not clear.

In this paper, we regarded resilience as a mediator. Resilience, referring to the ability to recover from adversity and trauma quickly (Gaffey, Bergeman, Clark, & Wirth, 2016; Luthar, Cicchetti, & Becker, 2010), was supposed to help individuals to better adapt to stressful or traumatic situation (Komachi & Kamibeppu, 2018). According to resilience theory, resilience is a dynamic process and it may be influenced by many factors such as negative emotions. Previous studies had demonstrated that negative emotions, including depression, anxiety and stress could result in decreased level of resilience (Dias et al., 2015; Xindi et al., 2015). One study indicated that higher psychological flexibility was positively associated with an increase in well-being, meaning better QoL (Wersebe et al., 2018). Some researchers regarded resilience as promoters of well-being (Toland & Carrigan, 2011) as well as indicators of adolescent development (Masten & Tellegen, 2012). That was to say, resilience could predict quality of life to some extent. In fact, there was increasing evidence for a link between resilience and QoL. For example, one previous study found that resilience could predict QoL among bipolar disorder patients (Lee et al., 2017; Oliva et al., 2019). Other researches also demonstrated that resilience could significantly predict quality of life or some domains of quality of life (Calvete, Las, & Gómez, 2018; Cau-Bareille, 2011; UNDP 2014). Therefore, according to the findings that negative emotions, resilience, and quality of life are closely related, it was reasonable for us to regard resilience as a mediator between negative emotions and quality of life in current study.

Although negative emotions may result in poor quality of life through the mediating role of resilience, not all individuals suffered from negative emotions homogeneously experience lower levels of resilience and have poor quality of life. Social support may moderate the effect of negative emotions on resilience and quality of life. According to the buffering effect model of social support, social support could promote mental health condition via alleviating the effect of negative factors on mental health. Social support, referring to the external support getting from the important others and the society, and could provide individuals with instrumental or emotional help (Cohen, 2004). Individuals with different levels of external support would react differently to difficulties in life, social support had been proved to be correlated with some good outcomes such as well beings (Chu, Saucier, & Hafner, 2010), low stress (Swickert, Rosentreter, Hittner, & Mushrush, 2002), low anxiety and depression (Ft, Cacciatore, Schnebly, & Froen, 2009), and better physical and mental functions, the specific aspects of QoL (Krokavcova et al., 2008; Wu et al., 2018). In addition, Sim, Bowes, & Gardner, 2019 found that mothers’ perceived social support could promote psychological resilience, which was consistent with finding by Glozah and Pevalin (2014) that social support from different fields played a promoting role in the development of psychological resilience (Khan, Hamdan, Ahmad, Mustaffa, & Mahalle, 2016). So, in current study, we regarded social support as a moderator.

As for the reason we should do this research was that previous studies had some limitations in the field of quality of life. First, previous studies had mainly focused on the health-related QoL (Nourbakhsh, Julian, & Waubant, 2016; Tepavcevic et al., 2013), relatively less exploring other aspects of QoL, such as emotional, social and behavioral aspects (Varni, Burwinkle, Seid, & Skarr, 2003). Second, previous researches mainly explored the individuals with diseases such as insomnia, dialysis, and cardiovascular diseases, etc. (Jalali, Abdolazimi, Alaei, & Solati, 2019; Ribeiro et al., 2018). Third, the mechanism underlying the relationship between negative emotions and QoL is not clear. Therefore, given that the findings that negative emotions, resilience, and quality of life are closely related, and given that social support is also associated with these variables, we tried to investigate the relationship between the negative emotions and QoL among adolescents and to figure out the mediating role of resilience and the moderating role of social support in a large sample from Chinese adolescents. Basing on previous findings, we hypothesized that (1) negative emotions could predict lower QoL via decreasing resilience; (2) social support moderated the relationships among negative emotions, resilience and QoL. Our hypothesized model can be seen in Figure 1.

Figure 1.

The hypothesized model.

(0.05MB).
MethodParticipants and procedure

We collected the data by cluster sampling. The study was approved by the Ethical Committee of Zhengzhou University and carried out in accordance with the approved guidelines and regulations before data collection. We contacted several Primary Schools and Secondary Schools in Hong Kong and Zhengzhou to explain the study purpose to them. Some schools expressed interest in assisting us to recruit participants. Then, students were also asked to complete a series of questionnaires under the supervision of school teachers or research assistants after getting information consent. Participants were assured that their answers were confidential and anonymous. 6,401 participants with a mean age of 11.94 (SD = 1.72), ranging from 9 to 15 with 3,390 boys (53%) and 3,011 girls (47%) were recruited. Primary school students (Grade 4, Grade 5, and Grade 6) accounted for (56.3%) and secondary school students (Grade 1, Grade 2, and Grade 3) accounted for (43.7%). 6354 participants were born in Mainland, China. Participants were asked to complete questionnaires and demographics including sex, age and class.

Instruments

The Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory 4.0 Generic Scale (PedsQL; Varni et al., 2003) included four facets: physiological function, emotional function, social function and school function. Each item in PedsQL was the survey of the frequency of an event in recent months. Each item ranged from 0-4: 0 (100 points) for never, 1 (75 points) for hardly ever, 2 (50 points) for sometimes, 3 (25 points) for often and 4 (0 points) for always. The score of each aspect was the sum of the scores of the contained items divided by the number of the contained items. The score of the total scale was the sum of the scores of the items divided by the number of the items in the whole scale. The higher score represented the better QoL. The Cronbach’s coefficient was .89.

The Depression Anxiety Stress Scale (NESS; Lovibond & Lovibond, 1995) consisted of 3 sub-scales with 21 items, which respectively measured individual’s experience of depression, anxiety, and stress. Each item has a four-point Likert scale (0 = never applied to oneself, 1 = some degree/some of the time, 2 = considerable degree/a good part of time, 3 = very much/most of the time). The score of each sub-scale was the sum of the 7 items multiplied by 2, with the range from 0 to 42 points. The higher the score was, the more serious the degree of depression, anxiety or stress was. The total score of the scale is the sum of the scores of the sub-scale (Lee, 2019). In the current study, the Cronbach coefficient was .94.

Resilience Scale for Chinese Adolescent is a 27-item, self-rating and validated measure (Hu & Gan 2008). Each item was rated on a 5-point Likert scale (1 = strongly disagree, and 5 = strongly agree). The total score was the sum of the all items, and higher score meant the higher level of resilience. In this study, the Cronbach coefficient was .84.

The Perceived Social Support Scale (PSSS; Zimet, Dahlem, Zimet, & Farley, 2010) is a 12-item, self-rating measure. Each item ranged from 1 (totally disagree) to 7 (completely agree), with the total score ranging from 12 to 84. And higher score meant the higher level of social support. In this study, the Cronbach coefficient was .93.

Data analysis

Descriptive analysis was calculated for describing sociodemographic characteristics. The correlations of study variables (negative emotions, resilience, social support and QoL) were analyzed by Pearson correlation analyses. The mediation and moderated mediation model were analyzed using the PROCESS macro for SPSS (Hayes, 2013). Confidence intervals that do not contain zero indicate significant mediation effects (Hayes, 2013). To determine whether an indirect effect or a total effect was statistically significant, we used maximum likelihood estimation and the bias-corrected bootstrap 95% confidence interval based on 5,000 bootstrapping. Firstly, we tested whether the associations between negative emotions and QoL was mediated by resilience using Model 4. If the 95% CI of indirect effect did not contain zero, it indicated that the mediating effect was significant. Next, Model 59 was used to examine the moderated mediation effect, that was, whether social support moderated the direct and indirect effects of negative emotions on QoL. Statistical significance was defined as a two-tailed p-value <.05.

ResultsDescriptive data and correlations

Descriptive statistics and bivariate correlations between study variables are shown in Table 1. All variables were significantly correlated in conceptually expected ways. Negative emotions were negatively correlated with resilience, QoL and social support. In addition, resilience was positively associated with social support and QoL. Specifically, negative emotions were negatively related to resilience (r = -.45, p < .01), QoL (r = -.51, p < .01) and social support (r = -.30, p < .01). Resilience was positively associated with social support (r = .48, p < .01) and QoL (r = .44, p < .01).

Table 1.

Correlations, means and standards deviations of study variables.

  NES  QoL  SS 
NES       
QoL  -.51**     
SS  -.30**  .29**   
-.45**  .44**  .48** 
M  10.37  81.12  64.71  96.55 
SD  11.41  12.51  15.35  15.73 

Note. NES = depression, anxiety and stress; QoL = quality of life; SS = social support; R = resilience.

**

p < .01.

Mediation analyses

The results (Table 2) showed that the indirect (mediated) effect of negative emotions on QoL was significant (β = -.12, CI [-.41, -.36]). The direct effect of negative emotions on QoL was significant (β = -.39, CI [-.13, -.10]). Specifically, resilience mediated the relationship between negative emotions and QoL. In other words, negative emotions predicted decreased resilience (β = -.45, CI [-.48, -.43]), and lower QoL (β = -.39, CI [-.41, -.36]).

Table 2.

Summary of bootstrapped mediation analyses of the effects of NES on QoL through resilience.

Outcome  Mediation analysis paths  Estimated  95% bias-corrected CI
      Lower  Upper 
QoL  Direct effect  -.39**  -.41  -.36 
  Indirect effect  -.12**  -.13  -.10 
  NES → R  -.45**  -.48  -.43 
  R → QoL  .26**  .23  .28 
  NES → QoL  -.39**  -.41  -.36 

Note. NES = depression, anxiety and stress; R = resilience; QoL = quality of life; Standardized regression coefficients shown for each path CI bias-corrected confidence intervals based on 5000 bootstrapped samples, 95% confidence interval does not include zero.

**

p<.01.

Moderated mediation analyses

Based on the mediation model, we proposed a moderated mediation model. Table 3 showed the results of moderated mediation. According to our Hypothesis 2, social support may moderate both the direct effect (negative emotions - QOL) and indirect effect (negative emotions - resilience and resilience - QOL). The results showed that social support moderated the direct effect of negative emotions on QoL (negative emotions × social support: β = -.02, 95% CI [-.04,-.00]) and moderated the path between negative emotions and resilience (negative emotions × social support: β = -.08, 95% CI [-.09, -.05]), signifying that the direct effect of negative emotions on resilience and QoL was moderated by social support among adolescents. Besides, the results confirmed our hypothesis that social support did play a moderating role between resilience and QoL (resilience × social support: β = .02, 95% CI [.00, .04]). In conclusion, social support moderated the mediation model (Figures 2, 3, 4 and 5), which was in accordance with our hypothesis.

Table 3.

Moderated mediating effect analyses.

  Model 1(R)  Model 2 (QoL)  Model 3 (QoL) 
  B (SE)  B (SE)  β (SE) 
NES  -.35 (.01)**  -.39 (.01)**  -.39 (.01)** 
SS  .39 (.01)**  .07 (.01)**   
  .22 (.01)** 
R × SS      .02 (.01)** 
NES × SS  -.07 (.00)**  -.02 (.01)**   

Note. NES = depression, anxiety and stress; QoL = quality of life; SS = social support; R = resilience.

**

p<.01.

Figure 2.

The proposed moderated mediation model.

(0.06MB).
Figure 3.

Resilience as a function of NES and SS.

Note. NES = depression, anxiety and stress; SS = social support.

(0.07MB).
Figure 4.

QoL as a function of NES and SS.

Note. QoL = quality of life; NES = depression, anxiety and stress; SS = social support.

(0.07MB).
Figure 5.

QoL as a function of resilience and SS.

Note. QoL = quality of life; R = resilience; SS = social support.

(0.06MB).
Discussion

The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of negative emotions on QoL and the underlying psychological mechanisms among adolescents. To our knowledge, we are not the first to examine the relationship between negative emotions and QoL, but we are the first to examine the mediating role of resilience between them, and the first to examine whether social support could moderate the mediation model.

As hypothesized, we found that negative emotions were significantly and negatively correlated with QoL, which was consistent with previous studies (Aggelopoulou et al., 2017; Bujang et al., 2015; Gao, Su, Sweet, & Calabrese, 2019), and resilience was significantly and positively correlated with QoL (García-León et al., 2019). Importantly, we found that resilience mediated the relationship between negative emotions and QoL, which could be explained by the following reasons: first, resilience is not only regarded as a stable personality (Luthar & Cicchetti, 2000; Van Kessel, 2013), but also considered as a dynamic progress; second, according to Feder, Fred-Torres, Southwick, and Charney (2019), resilience, as a complex and dynamic process, could be affected by so many factors such as psychological, social and biological factors. Thus, it was reasonable to infer that negative emotions could decrease the level of resilience and further predict the lower level of QoL (Aggelopoulou et al., 2017). Additionally, we also found that negative emotions could reduce resilience as well as QoL to a greater extent for adolescents with lower social support, compared with those with higher social support (Figures 3 and 4), and resilience combined with social support could increase QoL (Figure 5). Our results were consistent with the previous findings (Ruiz-Robledillo, De Andres-García, Pérez-Blasco, González-Bono, & Moya-Albiol, 2014; Song, Fu, & Wang, 2019) that social support could exert a positive influence on mental health.

It was well-known that social support, defined as interactions that lead someone to believe that he is cared for and loved, esteemed (Cobb, 1976), can protect adolescents from negative outcomes such as suicidal ideation and suicide attempts in both adults (Chioqueta & Stiles, 2007; Kleiman & Liu, 2013) and adolescents (Mackin, Perlman, Davila, Kotov, & Klein, 2017; Miller, Esposito-Smythers, & Leichtweis, 2015). That is to say, although negative emotions can produce negative effects on QoL, the individuals who have gained social support from their families and friends will be less affected by negative emotions. In conclusion, the moderated mediation effect enlightens that it is necessary to consider resilience and social support when investigating the relationship between negative emotions and QoL.

These results have practical implications that point to the importance of cultivating positive psychological development in order to achieve good QoL. From the results of this paper, we could infer that some interventions aiming to increasing the level of resilience were necessary. Getting aspirations from Feder et al. (2019), we could enhance the level of resilience from two perspectives: psychosocial and cognitive interventions and neurobiological interventions. During adolescence, adolescents were sensitive to the environment (Gee & Casey, 2015; Tottenham, 2014)). According to the social interaction theory, social support, regarded as external support, can be offered by important others in individuals’ life, meaning that parents, teachers and peers regarded as important others for adolescents are vital to adolescents’ healthy development. So, good parenting skills and ample resources are beneficial to children’s development. Some interventions focused on helping parents recognize children’s needs and improving the attachment security and providing ample resources might be beneficial (Dozier et al., 2009; Duncan, Magnuson, & Votruba-Drzal, 2014; Fisher, Gunnar, Dozier, Bruce, & Pears, 2010).

There are some limitations in this study. First, the self-report measures may be not objective. Second, because of the cluster sampling, our results are not representative of the entire population of adolescents. Third, this study is a cross-sectional survey, and we are unable to make causal inferences. Therefore, further longitudinal research should be conducted to validate the findings. Future studies should include a design that can measure QoL more objectively and more research on the temporal relationship between negative emotions and QoL is needed. In addition, this study demonstrates that resilience and social support can be regarded as the underlying psychological mechanisms between negative emotions and QoL, future studies can further dig out some other variables and explore their roles between negative emotions and QoL.

Conclusions

Our findings not only suggest that individuals’ QoL can be affected by negative emotions via decreasing resilience, but also that individuals with higher social support are likely to report higher level of quality of life. Thus, we can conclude that QoL can be improved by two different aspects. On the one hand, increasing the resilience is a good way. On the other hand, offering enough social support is also very useful. Thus, our findings are of great importance and may reveal the need to enhance resilience, to offer social support among adolescents. In conclusion, this paper provides a new perspective view of improving QoL by using a large sample.

Funding

This work was supported by Education Programs of National Social Science Fund of China (BBA170064).

Acknowledgement

This work was supported by Education Programs of National Social Science Fund of China (BBA170064).

References
[Aggelopoulou et al., 2017]
Z. Aggelopoulou, N.V. Fotos, A.A. Chatziefstratiou, K. Giakoumidakis, I. Elefsiniotis, H. Brokalaki.
The level of anxiety, depression and quality of life among patients with heart failure in Greece.
Applied Nursing Research, 34 (2017), pp. 52-56
[Anyan and Hjemdal, 2016]
F. Anyan, O. Hjemdal.
Adolescent stress and symptoms of anxiety and depression: Resilience explains and differentiates the relationships.
Journal of Affective Disorders, 203 (2016), pp. 213-220
[Apter et al., 1988]
A. Apter, A. Bleich, R. Plutchik, S. Mendelsohn, S. Tyano.
Suicidal behavior, depression, and conduct disorder in hospitalized adolescents.
Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, 27 (1988), pp. 696-699
[Arraras et al., 2019]
J.I. Arraras, B. Ibanez, N. Pereda, S. Iribarren, I. Basterra.
The association of clinical insight and depression with quality of life in schizophrenia.
Psychiatry Research, 279 (2019), pp. 350-352
[Austin et al., 2011]
E.J. Austin, D.H. Saklofske, S.M. Mastoras.
Emotional intelligence, coping and exam-related stress in Canadian undergraduate students.
Australian Journal of Psychology, 62 (2011), pp. 42-50
[Bevan et al., 2014]
J.L. Bevan, R. Gomez, L. Sparks.
Disclosures about important life events on Facebook: Relationships with stress and quality of life.
Computers in Human Behavior, 39 (2014), pp. 246-253
[Bujang et al., 2015]
M.A. Bujang, R. Musa, W.J. Liu, T.F. Chew, C.T. Lim, Z. Morad.
Depression, anxiety and stress among patients with dialysis and the association with quality of life.
Asian Journal of Psychiatry, 18 (2015), pp. 49-52
[Calvete et al., 2018]
E. Calvete, H.C. Las, D.B.A. Gómez.
Longitudinal associations between resilience and quality of life in eating disorders.
Psychiatry Research, 259 (2018), pp. 470-475
[Cau-Bareille, 2011]
D. Cau-Bareille.
Factors influencing early retirement in a female-dominated profession: Kindergarten teacher in France.
Work, 40 (2011), pp. 15-30
[Chioqueta and Stiles, 2007]
A.P. Chioqueta, T.C. Stiles.
The relationship between psychological buffers, hopelessness, and suicidal ideation.
[Choi et al., 2010]
I.J. Choi, G.B. Lee, H.N. Lee.
Korean youth indicator survey V: International comparative survey of youth health status (Korea, United States of America, Japan, and China).
Korea National Youth Policy Institute, (2010),
[Chu et al., 2010]
P.S. Chu, D.A. Saucier, E. Hafner.
Meta-analysis of the relationships between social support and well-being in children and adolescents.
Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology, 29 (2010),
[Cobb, 1976]
S. Cobb.
Social support as a moderator of life stress.
Psychosomatic Medicine, 38 (1976), pp. 300-314
[Cohen, 2004]
S. Cohen.
Social relationships and health.
American Psychologist, 59 (2004), pp. 676-684
[Dias et al., 2015]
R. Dias, R.L. Santos, M.F.B.D. Sousa, M.M.L. Nogueira, B. Torres, T. Belfort, M.F.B.D. Sousa.
Resilience of caregivers of people with dementia: A systematic review of biological and psychosocial determinants.
Trends in Psychiatry & Psychotherapy, 37 (2015), pp. 12
[Dozier et al., 2009]
M. Dozier, O. Lindhiem, E. Lewis, J. Bick, K. Bernard, E. Peloso.
Effects of a foster parent training program on young children’s attachment behaviors: Preliminary evidence from a randomized clinical trial.
Child and Adolescent Social Work Journal, 26 (2009), pp. 321-332
[Dryman et al., 2016]
M.T. Dryman, S. Gardner, J.W. Weeks, R.G. Heimberg.
Social anxiety disorder and quality of life: How fears of negative and positive evaluation relate to specific domains of life satisfaction.
Journal of Anxiety Disorders, 38 (2016), pp. 1-8
[Duncan et al., 2014]
G.J. Duncan, K. Magnuson, E. Votruba-Drzal.
Boosting family income to promote child development.
The Future of Children, 24 (2014), pp. 99-120
[Feder et al., 2019]
A. Feder, S. Fred-Torres, S. Southwick, D. Charney.
The biology of human resilience: Opportunities for enhancing resilience across the life span.
Biology of Human Resilience, 86 (2019), pp. 443-453
[Fisher et al., 2010]
P.A. Fisher, M.R. Gunnar, M. Dozier, J. Bruce, K.C. Pears.
Effects of therapeutic interventions for foster children on behavioral problems, caregiver attachment, and stress regulatory neural systems.
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1094 (2010), pp. 215-225
[Frison and Eggermont, 2016]
E. Frison, S. Eggermont.
Exploring the relationships between different types of Facebook use, perceived online social support and adolescents’ depressed mood.
Social Science Computer Review, 34 (2016), pp. 153-171
[Ft et al., 2009]
J.C.M. Ft, J. Cacciatore, S. Schnebly, J.F. Froen.
The effects of social support on maternal anxiety and depression after stillbirth.
Health & Social Care in the Community, 17 (2009), pp. 167-176
[Gaffey et al., 2016]
A.E. Gaffey, C.S. Bergeman, L.A. Clark, M.M. Wirth.
Aging and the hpaaxis: Stress and resilience in older adults.
Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews, 68 (2016), pp. 928-945
[Gao et al., 2019]
K. Gao, M. Su, J. Sweet, J.R. Calabrese.
Correlation between depression/anxiety symptom severity and quality of life in patients with major depressive disorder or bipolar disorder.
Journal of Affective Disorders, 244 (2019), pp. 9-15
[García-León et al., 2019]
M.A. García-León, J.M. Pérez-Mármol, R. Gonzalez-Pérez, M.C. García-Ríos, M.I. Peralta-Ramírez.
Relationship between resilience and stress: Perceived stress, stressful life events, HPA axis response during a stressful task and hair cortisol.
Physiology & Behavior, 202 (2019), pp. 87-93
[Gee and Casey, 2015]
D.G. Gee, B.J. Casey.
The impact of developmental timing for stress and recovery.
Neurobiology of Stress, 1 (2015), pp. 184-194
[Glozah and Pevalin, 2014]
F.N. Glozah, D.J. Pevalin.
Social support, stress, health, and academic success in Ghanaian adolescents: A path analysis.
Journal of Adolescence, 37 (2014), pp. 451-460
[Hayes, 2013]
A.F. Hayes.
Introduction to mediation, moderation, and conditional process analysis: A regression-based approach.
Guilford Press, (2013),
[Henry and Crawford, 2005]
J.D. Henry, J.R. Crawford.
The short-form version of the Depression Anxiety Stress Scales (DASS-21): Construct validity and normative data in a large non-clinical sample.
British Journal of Clinical Psychology, 44 (2005), pp. 227-239
[Hu and Gan, 2008]
Y.Q. Hu, Y.Q. Gan.
Development and Psychometric Validity of the Resilience Sale for Chinese Adolescents.
Acta Psychologica Sinica, 40 (2008), pp. 902-912
[Huang et al., 2019]
Y.Q. Huang, Y. Wang, H. Wang, Z.R. Liu, X. Yu, J. Yan, Y.Q. Yu, C.G. Kou, X.F. Xu, J. Lu, Z.Z. Wang, S.L. He, Y.F. Xu, Y.L. He, T. Li, W.J. Guo, H.J. Tian, G.M. Xu, X.D. Xu, Y.J. Ma, L.H. Wang, L.M. Wang, Y.P. Yan, B. Wang, S.Y. Xiao, L. Zhou, L.J. Li, L.W. Tan, T.T. Zhang, C. Ma, Q. Li, H. Ding, H.C. Geng, F.J. Jia, J.F. Shi, S.L. Wang, N. Zhang, X.B. Du, X.D. Du, Y. Wu.
Prevalence of mental disorders in China: A cross-sectional epidemiological study.
The Lancet Psychiatry, 6 (2019), pp. 211-224
[Jalali et al., 2019]
D. Jalali, M. Abdolazimi, Z. Alaei, K. Solati.
Effectiveness of mindfulness-based stress reduction program on quality of life in cardiovascular disease patients.
International Journal of Cardiology Heart Vasculature, 23 (2019),
[Khan et al., 2016]
A. Khan, A.R. Hamdan, R. Ahmad, M.S. Mustaffa, S. Mahalle.
Problem-solving coping and social support as mediators of academic stress and suicidal ideation among malaysian and indian adolescents.
Community Mental Health Journal, 52 (2016), pp. 245-250
[Kleiman and Liu, 2013]
E.M. Kleiman, R.T. Liu.
Social support as a protective factor in suicide: Findings from two nationally representative samples.
Journal of Affective Disorders, 150 (2013), pp. 540-545
[Komachi and Kamibeppu, 2018]
M.H. Komachi, K. Kamibeppu.
Association between resilience, acute stress symptoms and characteristics of family members of patients at early admission to the intensive care unit.
Mental Health & Prevention, 9 (2018), pp. 34-41
[Krokavcova et al., 2008]
M. Krokavcova, J.P.V. Dijk, I. Nagyova, J. Rosenberger, M. Gavelova, B. Middel, Z. Gdovinova, J.W. Groothoff.
Social support as a predictor of perceived health status in patients with multiple sclerosis.
Patient Education and Counseling, 73 (2008), pp. 159-165
[Lee, 2019]
D. Lee.
The Convergent, Discriminant, and Nomological Validity of the Depression Anxiety Stress Scales-21 (DASS-21).
Journal of Affective Disorders, (2019), pp. 136-142
[Lee et al., 2017]
D. Lee, B. Cha, C.S. Park, B.J. Kim, C.S. Lee, S.J. Lee, J.W. Choi.
Effects of resilience on quality of life in patients with bipolar disorder.
Journal of Affective Disorders, 207 (2017), pp. 434-441
[Li et al., 2017]
J. Li, X. Chen, C. Zhao, Y. Xu.
Relationship between adaptability and depressive symptoms among adolescent students.
Chinese Journal of Public Health, 33 (2017), pp. 806-809
[Li et al., 2016]
Y.N. Li, B. Shapiro, J.C. Kim, M. Zhang, J. Porszasz, R. Bross, J.D. Kopple.
Association between quality of life and anxiety, depression, physical activity and physical performance in maintenance hemodialysis patients.
Chronic Diseases and Translational Medicine, 2 (2016), pp. 110-119
[Lovibond and Lovibond, 1995]
P.F. Lovibond, S.H. Lovibond.
The structure of negative emotional states: Comparison of the depression anxiety stress scales (dass) with the beck depression and anxiety inventories.
Behaviour Research & Therapy, 33 (1995), pp. 335-343
[Luthar and Cicchetti, 2000]
S.S. Luthar, D. Cicchetti.
The construct of resilience: Implications for interventions and social policies.
Development and Psychopathology, 12 (2000), pp. 857-885
[Luthar et al., 2010]
S.S. Luthar, D. Cicchetti, B. Becker.
The construct of resilience: A critical evaluation and guidelines for future work.
Child Development, 71 (2010), pp. 543-562
[Mackin et al., 2017]
D.M. Mackin, G. Perlman, J. Davila, R. Kotov, D.N. Klein.
Social support buffers the effect of interpersonal life stress on suicidal ideation and self-injury during adolescence.
Psychological Medicine, 47 (2017), pp. 1149-1161
[Masten and Tellegen, 2012]
A.S. Masten, A. Tellegen.
Resilience in developmental psychopathology: Contributions of the project competence longitudinal study.
Development and Psychopathology, 24 (2012), pp. 345-361
[Miller et al., 2015]
A.B. Miller, C. Esposito-Smythers, R.N. Leichtweis.
Role of social support in adolescent suicidal ideation and suicide attempts.
Journal of Adolescent Health, 56 (2015), pp. 286-292
[Nourbakhsh et al., 2016]
B. Nourbakhsh, L. Julian, E. Waubant.
Fatigue and depression predict quality of life in patients with early multiple sclerosis: A longitudinal study.
European Journal of Neurology, 23 (2016), pp. 1482-1486
[Oliva et al., 2019]
A. Oliva, J.M. Garcia-Cebrian, E.F. Calatayud, I. Serrano-Garcia, M.A. Herraiz, P.J. Coronado.
A comparison of quality of life and resilience in menopausal women with and without a history of gynaecological cancer.
[Pakpour et al., 2019]
A.H. Pakpour, C.Y. Chen, C.Y. Lin, C. Strong, M.C. Tsai, Y.C. Lin.
The relationship between children’s overweight and quality of life: A comparison of Sizing Me Up, PedsQL and Kid-KINDL.
International Journal of Clinical and Health Psychology, 19 (2019), pp. 49-56
[Ribeiro et al., 2018]
Í.J.S. Ribeiro, R. Pereira, I.V. Freire, B.G. de Oliveira, C.A. Casotti, E.N. Boery.
Stress and quality of life among university students: A systematic literature review.
Health Professions Education, 4 (2018), pp. 70-77
[Ruiz-Robledillo et al., 2014]
N. Ruiz-Robledillo, S. De Andrés-Garcia, J. Pérez Blasco, E. González-Bono, L. Moya-Albiol.
Highly resilient coping entails better perceived health, high social support and low morning cortisol levels in parents of children with autism spectrum disorder.
Research in Developmental Disabilities, 35 (2014), pp. 686-695
[Saklofske et al., 2012]
D.H. Saklofske, E.J. Austin, S.M. Mastoras, L. Beaton, S.E. Osborne.
Relationships of personality, affect, emotional intelligence and coping with student stress and academic success: Different patterns of association for stress and success.
Learning & Individual Differences, 22 (2012), pp. 251-257
[Siarava et al., 2019]
E. Siarava, T. Hyphantis, A.H. Katsanos, S.H. Pelidou, A.P. Kyritsis, S. Markoula.
Depression and quality of life in patients with epilepsy in Northwest Greece.
[Sim et al., 2019]
A. Sim, L. Bowes, F. Gardner.
The Promotive Effects of Social Support for Parental Resilience in a Refugee Context: A Cross-Sectional Study with Syrian Mothers in Lebanon.
Prevention Science, 20 (2019), pp. 674-683
[Song et al., 2019]
C. Song, Z. Fu, J. Wang.
Social Support and Academic Stress in the Development of Psychological Adjustment in Chinese Migrant Children: Examination of Compensatory Model of Psychological Resilience.
Child Indicators Research, 12 (2019), pp. 1275-1286
[Swickert et al., 2002]
R.J. Swickert, C.J. Rosentreter, J.B. Hittner, J.E. Mushrush.
Extraversion, social support processes, and stress.
Personality and Individual Differences, 32 (2002), pp. 877-891
[Tepavcevic et al., 2013]
D.K. Tepavcevic, T. Pekmezovic, N. Stojsavljevic, J. Kostic, I.D. Basuroski, S. Mesaros, J. Drulovic.
Predictive value of health-related quality of life in progression of disability and depression in persons with multiple sclerosis: A 3-year study.
Acta Neurologica Belgica, 113 (2013), pp. 403-409
[Toland and Carrigan, 2011]
J. Toland, D. Carrigan.
Educational psychology and resilience: New concept, new opportunities.
School Psychology International, 32 (2011), pp. 95-106
[Tottenham, 2014]
N. Tottenham.
The importance of early experiences for neuro-affective development.
Current Topics in Behavioral Neurosciences, 16 (2014), pp. 109
[UNDP, 2014]
UNDP.
Human development report 2014: sustaining human progress: Reducing vulnerabilities and building resilience.
Communications Development Incorporated, Washington DC, USA, (2014),
[Van Kessel, 2013]
G. Van Kessel.
The ability of older people to overcome adversity: A review of the resilience concept.
Geriatric Nursing, 34 (2013), pp. 122-127
[Varni et al., 2003]
J.W. Varni, T.M. Burwinkle, M. Seid, D. Skarr.
The PedsQL?* 4.0 as a pediatric population health measure: Feasibility, reliability, and validity.
Ambulatory Pediatrics, 3 (2003), pp. 329-341
[Wersebe et al., 2018]
H. Wersebe, R. Lieb, A.H. Meyer, M. Michea, T. Mikoteit, C. Imbodenb, J. Hoyer, K. Bader, M. Hatzinger, A.T. Gloster.
Well-being in major depression and social phobia with and without comorbidity.
International Journal of Clinical and Health Psychology, 18 (2018), pp. 201-208
[World Health Organization, 2014]
World Health Organization.
WHOQOL: Measuring quality of life. Health Stat Inf Syst (2014).
Author, (2014),
[Wu et al., 2018]
M. Wu, Y. Yang, D. Zhang, X. Zhao, Y. Sun, H. Xie, Y. Li.
Association between social support and health-related quality of life among Chinese rural elders in nursing homes: The mediating role of resilience.
Quality of Life Research, 27 (2018), pp. 783-792
[Xindi et al., 2015]
F. Xindi, V. Wilson, S.K. Calabrese, T.G. Heckman, K.J. Sikkema, D.L. Humphries, N.B. Hansen.
Resilience, stress, and life quality in older adults living with HIV/AIDS.
Aging and Mental Health, 19 (2015), pp. 1015
[Zimet et al., 2010]
G.D. Zimet, N.W. Dahlem, S.G. Zimet, G.K. Farley.
The Multidimensional Scale of Perceived Social Support.
Journal of Personality Assessment, (2010), pp. 30-41
Copyright © 2020. Asociación Española de Psicología Conductual
Article options
Tools