Positive affective recovery in daily life as a momentary mechanism across subclinical and clinical stages of mental disorder (Preprint)

Author:

Ader LeonieORCID,Schick AnitaORCID,Simons ClaudiaORCID,Delespaul PhilippeORCID,Myin-Germeys InezORCID,Vaessen ThomasORCID,Reininghaus UlrichORCID

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Identifying momentary risk and protective mechanisms may enhance our understanding and treatment of mental disorders. Affective stress reactivity is one mechanism that has been reported to be altered in individuals with early and later stages of mental disorder. Additionally, initial evidence suggests individuals with early and enduring psychosis may have an extended recovery period of negative affect in response to daily stressors (i.e., a longer duration until affect reaches baseline levels after stress), but evidence on positive affective recovery as a putative protective mechanism remains limited.

OBJECTIVE

This study aimed to investigate trajectories of positive affect in response to stress across the continuum of mental disorder in a transdiagnostic sample.

METHODS

Using the Experience Sampling Method, minor activity-, event-, and overall stress and positive affect were assessed 10 times a day, with time points approximately 90 minutes apart on six consecutive days in a pooled data set including 367 individuals with mental disorder, 217 individuals at risk for a severe mental disorder, and 227 controls. Multilevel analysis and linear contrasts were used to investigate trajectories of positive affect within and between groups.

RESULTS

Baseline positive affect differed across groups and we observed stress reactivity in positive affect within each group. We found evidence for positive affective recovery after reporting activity- or overall stress within each group. While controls recovered to baseline positive affect about 90 minutes after stress, patients and at-risk individuals required about 180 minutes to recover. However, between-group differences in the affective recovery period fell short of significance.

CONCLUSIONS

The results provide first evidence that positive affective recovery may be relevant within transdiagnostic subclinical and clinical stages of mental disorder suggesting it may be a potential target for mobile health interventions fostering resilience in daily life.

Publisher

JMIR Publications Inc.

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