Affiliation:
1. Tilburg University, The Netherlands,
2. Tilburg University, The Netherlands
Abstract
The present study examined how autonomy—connectedness and attachment styles relate to depression and anxiety among 69 clients at a primary mental health care institution and 105 non-clients. We expected poor autonomy—connectedness (i.e., low self-awareness, low capacity for managing new situations, and high sensitivity to others) and insecure attachment to predict depression and anxiety. Clients, compared with non-clients, differed on all study variables. Anxious attachment was a strong predictor of depression and anxiety. Both sensitivity to others and capacity for managing new situations directly predicted anxiety; and, like self-awareness, had indirect effects, via anxious attachment, on both anxiety and depression. Results underscore the importance of autonomy—connectedness (in addition to insecure attachment) in treating anxiety and depression.
Subject
Sociology and Political Science,Developmental and Educational Psychology,Communication,Social Psychology
Cited by
30 articles.
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