Mental contamination, disgust, and other negative emotions among survivors of sexual trauma: Results from a daily monitoring study

Mental contamination (MC)—feelings of dirtiness triggered by internal sources—is a potentially important yet understudied factor for survivors of sexual trauma. MC has been linked to disgust and other negative emotions (e.g., shame, guilt) cross-sectionally and in lab-based paradigms but not yet exa...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of anxiety disorders 2021-12, Vol.84, p.102477-102477, Article 102477
Hauptverfasser: Brake, C. Alex, Tipsword, Jordyn M., Badour, Christal L.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Mental contamination (MC)—feelings of dirtiness triggered by internal sources—is a potentially important yet understudied factor for survivors of sexual trauma. MC has been linked to disgust and other negative emotions (e.g., shame, guilt) cross-sectionally and in lab-based paradigms but not yet examined in ecological contexts. Additionally, links between MC and distinct negative emotions have not been studied systematically. The present study thus modeled relationships between MC and specific emotions both across and within days over a daily monitoring period. Forty-one females with sexual trauma history and associated MC completed twice-daily assessments of MC and seven emotions (disgust, shame, guilt, anger, hopelessness, sadness, anxiety) over 2 weeks via a smartphone app. Baseline MC and average daily MC were largely associated with higher daily averages of negative emotions. Concurrently, within-person changes in MC and negative emotions were also positively linked. Unexpectedly, intraindividual changes in MC were largely not associated with later negative emotions, whereas several emotions were negatively associated with later MC. Notably, MC among screened sexual trauma survivors was much more prevalent compared to prior research. Clinical relevance and future recommendations for ecological research in trauma-related mental contamination are discussed. •Daily mental contamination and negative emotions are modeled over a 2-week period.•Mental contamination and emotions are positively linked when assessed concurrently.•Mental contamination was largely not predictive of next-timepoint emotions.•Notably, most emotions negatively predicted next-timepoint mental contamination.•Mental contamination may be more prevalent in sexual trauma than previously noted.
ISSN:0887-6185
1873-7897
DOI:10.1016/j.janxdis.2021.102477