Self‐concealment is associated with brooding, but not with reflection: relationship between self‐concealment and rumination among older adults

Author:

Su Xinning12ORCID,Ogawa Susumu1ORCID,Takahashi Yoshifumi1,Shimizu Yuho134,Yamashiro Daichi1,Tsuchiya Toshihito1,Li Yan1,Kawakubo Kiyo1,Furuya Tomoki15,Cho Daisuke6,Ito Koki17,Takahashi Tomoya1,Suzuki Hiroyuki1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Research Team for Social Participation and Healthy Ageing, Tokyo Metropolitan Institute for Geriatrics and Gerontology Tokyo Japan

2. Department of Psychology Graduate School of Letters, Chuo University Tokyo Japan

3. Graduate School of Humanities and Sociology, The University of Tokyo Tokyo Japan

4. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science Tokyo Japan

5. Medical Engineering, Graduate School of Medicine, Dokkyo Medical University Tochigi Japan

6. Department of Psychology College of Education, Psychology and Human Studies, Aoyama Gakuin University Tokyo Japan

7. Graduate School of Psychology, Rissho University Tokyo Japan

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundPrevious research found that self‐concealment was associated with rumination in younger adults. However, no study had investigated the relationship between self‐concealment and rumination in older adults. Hence, this study aimed to investigate the relationship between self‐concealment and the two subfactors of rumination: brooding and reflection, in older adults.MethodsIn this study, we investigated the relationship between self‐concealment and rumination in older adults. Considering that rumination has two subfactors: brooding, which reflects the more maladaptive aspects of rumination; and reflection, which reflects the more adaptive aspects of rumination, we separately investigated the relationship between self‐concealment and the two subfactors of rumination.ResultsWe found that after controlling for other potentially relevant variables and the interrelationship between these two subfactors, self‐concealment was associated with brooding, but not with reflection.ConclusionsSelf‐concealment was only associated with the maladaptive aspect of rumination (i.e. brooding), and not with the adaptive aspects of rumination (i.e. reflection). These findings have important implications for enhancing the understanding of older adults' mental health, and imply that improving self‐concealment could potentially mitigate the maladaptive aspects of rumination, which may offer valuable insights for guiding future psychogeriatrics interventions.

Publisher

Wiley

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