Melbourne School of Psychological Sciences - Theses

Permanent URI for this collection

Search Results

Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Psychological outcomes of those experiencing early pregnancy loss
    Bendavid, Jessie ( 2019)
    Early Pregnancy Loss (EPL), a loss occurring before 14 weeks gestation, is a relatively common event, occurring in about 20% of pregnancies. Although many women and their partners do not experience psychological difficulties associated with this loss, a significant minority experience intense and sustained grief, depression and anxiety symptoms. Reliable prevalence rates of serious psychological consequences for women are not well established, and those of partners are largely unknown. Furthermore, it is unclear what factors increase the risk for developing serious psychological symptoms. A range of potential risk factors have been identified, but remain under-researched and have not been rigorously studied. According to Cognitive Behavioural Theory, it is possible that cognitions surrounding the loss may be a particularly relevant risk factor. Yet this topic has rarely been examined and the studies that have are characterised by major methodological shortcomings. Importantly, partners are rarely included in these studies. This study aimed to determine prevalence rates for grief depression and anxiety over the first three and a half months after EPL. It also investigated cognitions after EPL through the Common-Sense Model of Illness Representation, and their link with grief, depression and anxiety symptoms. This study included 28 male partners and 68 women diagnosed with EPL who attended the Early Pregnancy Assessment Service at the Royal Women’s Hospital in Melbourne, Australia. Participants completed self-report measures two weeks (T1), and three months (T2) post-loss. These included the Perinatal Grief Scale, the Centre for Epidemiological Studies-Depression scale, the State Trait Anxiety Inventory, and the Illness Perception Questionnaire-Revised. Results showed that the prevalence of grief, depression and anxiety symptoms for women at T1 were 20.6%, 54.4%, and 52.9%, respectively. For partners, the prevalence rates were 0% for grief, 32.1% for depression, and 25% for anxiety. These rates decreased by T2. Illness perceptions were found to significantly predict grief, depression and anxiety. Unexpectedly, it was often better perceptions of the loss that predicted worse psychological outcomes. These findings provide new information about the experience of EPL and suggest that critical timing for assessment and treatment would be within the first 3 months after EPL. Treatment options, particularly in terms of grief theories presented in the introduction, are discussed. Considering the surprising results and that this is the first study to examine illness perceptions among this sample, replication of these results is needed.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Assessing the relationship between executive function, coping, stress, depression, anxiety and quality of life in multiple sclerosis
    GRECH, LISA ( 2014)
    Background: Compared to healthy controls, people with multiple sclerosis (PwMS) use fewer adaptive and more maladaptive coping strategies when managing stressors and they experience higher rates of depression, anxiety and adjustment disorders. In addition, PwMS experience a high prevalence of cognitive impairment, including executive dysfunction, which has been linked to depression and anxiety. Aims: The current study examined the relationship between executive function, coping strategy use and psychosocial adjustment outcomes including stress, depression, anxiety and quality of life (QoL) in PwMS. The research assessed i) the ability of coping strategies and executive function to predict maladaptive and adaptive adjustment outcomes, and ii) the relationship between executive function and coping and whether there is a moderating and mediating relationship of different coping strategies between executive function and psychosocial adjustment in PwMS. Methods: Participants (N=107) with relapsing remitting or secondary progressive multiple sclerosis were administered tasks of executive function and completed self-report measures of stress, depression, anxiety, QoL and coping. Results: Consistent with expectations, stress, depression, anxiety and QoL were predicted by adaptive and maladaptive coping styles. Similarly, coping strategies, total coping and an adaptive coping index were predicted by tasks of executive function. Lower scores on tasks of executive function best predicted higher use of maladaptive strategies, but also adaptive strategies, while higher scores were limited in their ability to predict adaptive coping strategies. Tasks of executive function that most often predicted coping strategies included tasks of working memory, cognitive flexibility, information processing and attention. However, contrary to expectations, there was limited support for a relationship between tasks of executive function and psychosocial adjustment outcomes. An indirect relationship was found between executive function performance and adjustment through individual maladaptive coping strategies and adaptive coping strategies, as well as for an index of adaptive coping. Higher executive function performance was related to better adjustment via lower venting and behavioral disengagement, as well as higher scores on the adaptive coping index, whereas lower executive function performance was related to better adjustment via higher growth and acceptance. In general, better executive function and psychosocial adjustment was associated with minimal use of adaptive coping strategies, or greater use of maladaptive coping strategies. Conclusion: Executive function and psychosocial adjustment is mediated and moderated by coping strategies used by PwMS. Well-preserved executive function provides relative protection from poorer adjustment in the presence of high maladaptive or low adaptive coping. PwMS who perform poorly on tasks of executive function benefit from using less cognitively demanding coping strategies to enhance adjustment outcomes and this area that would benefit from further research to underpin effective intervention strategies. Findings from this study will assist with development of patient resources and patient management aimed at enhancing adaptive psychosocial adjustment in PwMS.