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Emotional and experiential factors that determine civilizational diseases.

Kamila MisiołekMagdalena Błażek
Published in: Health psychology report (2023)
The results emphasised the importance of the bond with a parent and of traumatic childhood experiences for the future health condition and for the social and emotional functioning. The study demonstrated that persons who experienced traumatic events in their families or in the peer environment in the first 18 years of their lives reported the presence of civilizational diseases. A correlation was found between peer violence, the threat of being abandoned by a caregiver, and diagnosed civilizational diseases in respondents. The fearful-ambivalent style in the relationship with the father proved to be a predictor of reported civilizational diseases. Adverse childhood experiences are linked to regulating emotions by taking perspective. The attachment style developed in the relationship with parents determined the ways of regulating negative and positive emotions in contact with other people. Persons who developed an avoidant attachment style in the relationships with the mother or the father less frequently seek social support when they experience negative emotions.
Keyphrases
  • mental health
  • social support
  • spinal cord injury
  • healthcare
  • depressive symptoms
  • public health
  • emergency department
  • childhood cancer
  • young adults
  • current status