Self-Criticism and Depressive Symptoms: Mediating Role of Self-Compassion

Self-compassion is gaining recognition as a resilience factor with implications for positive mental health. This study investigated the role of self-compassion in alleviating the effect of self-criticism on depressive symptoms. Participants were 147 urban, low-income African Americans with a recent...

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Veröffentlicht in:Omega: Journal of Death and Dying 2019-12, Vol.80 (2), p.202-223
Hauptverfasser: Zhang, Huaiyu, Watson-Singleton, Natalie N., Pollard, Sara E., Pittman, Delishia M., Lamis, Dorian A., Fischer, Nicole L., Patterson, Bobbi, Kaslow, Nadine J.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Self-compassion is gaining recognition as a resilience factor with implications for positive mental health. This study investigated the role of self-compassion in alleviating the effect of self-criticism on depressive symptoms. Participants were 147 urban, low-income African Americans with a recent suicide attempt. They were administered measures of self-criticism, depressive symptoms, and self-compassion. Results from this cross-sectional investigation showed that self-criticism was positively associated with depressive symptoms and negatively associated with self-compassion, and self-compassion was negatively associated with depressive symptoms. Bootstrapping analysis revealed that self-compassion mediated the self-criticism–depressive symptoms link, suggesting that self-compassion ameliorates the negative impact of self-criticism on depressive symptoms. Our findings suggest that low-income African Americans with recent suicide attempt histories may benefit from interventions that focus on enhancing self-compassion. These results also highlight self-compassion as a positive trait with promise to improve people’s quality of life and suggest that self-compassion-focused interventions are consistent with a positive psychology framework.
ISSN:0030-2228
1541-3764
DOI:10.1177/0030222817729609