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Randomized Controlled Trial
. 2007 Mar;10(1):75-91.
doi: 10.1080/10253890701208313.

The limits of 'adaptive' coping: well-being and mood reactions to stressors among women in abusive dating relationships

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Free article
Randomized Controlled Trial

The limits of 'adaptive' coping: well-being and mood reactions to stressors among women in abusive dating relationships

Kimberly Matheson et al. Stress. 2007 Mar.
Free article

Abstract

Coping is typically thought to be adaptive if it reduces immediate distress and promotes well-being. However, coping strategies might appear beneficial in a given situation, but when considered in the broader stressor context, those situational benefits may actually undermine well-being. Two studies (N = 473 and N = 80 women) demonstrated that, in the context of psychologically or physically abusive dating relationships, coping orientations were rooted in women's stressor history (prior assault trauma) and elevated emotion-focused and lower problem-focused efforts were predictive of greater depressive symptoms. Yet, in response to a stressor video that acted as a reminder of women's abusive experiences (but not to a stressor video unrelated to abuse), affective benefits (lower hostility, higher positive agency) were associated with abused women's emotion-focused coping endorsements, but were not linked to problem-focused coping. It seems that in some contexts, reduced distress might limit active efforts to alter a dysfunctional situation.

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