Document Type : Original Article

Author

شهرک غرب خیابان ایران زمین بن بست دانشگاه پ 9

10.22055/jacp.2024.45442.1334

Abstract

aim: Depression is the most common mental disorder. depressed individuals experience negative emotions more than others. Studies show that women suffer from depression 1.5 to 3 times more than men. The aim of this study is to investigate the effect of perceived partner responsiveness and fear of compassion on negative affects.
method: The population of This daily diary were depressed married women. The sample of it were 21 women with severe symptoms of depression. They were selected by purposive sampling. Using the experience sampling method, data were obtained on 24 times during 8 days via Porsline. Data were analyzed by multilevel analysis and REML estimation in spss-26 software.
findings: The results showed that changes in perceived partner responsiveness are associated with changes in sadness and anxiety in the inverse direction. Changes in fear of compassion are also directly associated with changes in sadness and anxiety.
results: The perceived partner responsiveness and the fear of compassion in the daily state can explain the negative affect of the depressed women participants. This finding, in addition to the theoretical expansion of Finney and Collins' model, can be of clinical interest in couple and individual psychotherapy of depressed married women.

Keywords

Main Subjects