Cognitive processes associated with emotional disorders: implications for efficient psychological treatments
Author
Corpas López, Jorge
Moriana Elvira, Juan Antonio
Venceslá, José Fernando
Gálvez Lara, Mario
Publisher
Taylor & FrancisDate
2021Subject
Emotional disordersAnxiety
Depression
Cognitive processes
Psychological treatments
Transdiagnostic
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Background: Emotional disorders are the most prevalent worldwide. Despite psychotherapies are their treatment of choice, there are difficulties to apply them property in mental health services. Since literature shows that cognitive processes are associated with anxiety and depressive symptoms, more information is needed in order to improve psychological treatments.
Aims: To determine the relation between cognitive factors with specific and non-specific emotional disorder symptoms in order to promote the development of accurate psychological treatments.
Methods: We analyzed the relation between rumination, worry, and metacognition with generalized anxiety, panic, and depression disorder symptoms from a clinical sample of 116 individuals through correlation and linear regression analyses.
Results: Although each specific disorder had a closer link with a particular cognitive process, all general emotional disorder symptoms were associated with the three cognitive factors studied.
Conclusions: For “pure” disorders, targeting a concrete cognitive process might be an optimal therapeutic option. However, due to the high comorbidity among emotional disorders, we support the dissemination of the transdiagnostic treatment approach in which all cognitive factors are taken into account.