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Emerging adults facing the COVID-19 pandemic: emotion dysregulation, mentalizing, and psychological symptoms.

Simone Charpentier MoraChiara BastianoniDonatella CavannaFabiola Bizzi
Published in: Current psychology (New Brunswick, N.J.) (2022)
Settled in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic, the present short-term longitudinal study aims to investigate the relation between emotion dysregulation, mentalizing (both certainty and uncertainty about mental states), and psychological symptoms in a sample of 83 emerging adults (M age  = 22.18 years, SD = 4.36) over a continuous period started with COVID-19 spreads. Results display significant positive associations between psychological symptoms and both emotion dysregulation and uncertainty about mental states, while an inverse association with certainty about mental states was found. A moderation model was also performed, showing a significant negative association between emotion dysregulation and psychological symptoms at low levels of uncertainty about mental states. Conversely, a marginally significant positive association occurs at high levels of uncertainty about mental states. In other words, the presence of individual impairments in perceiving one's own/others mind may increase the negative consequences of emotion dysregulation on reported psychological symptoms. To sum up, our findings highlight the importance of considering mentalizing as a possible key factor for the promotion of emerging adults' mental health also in the context of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.
Keyphrases
  • mental health
  • sleep quality
  • depressive symptoms
  • autism spectrum disorder
  • borderline personality disorder
  • coronavirus disease
  • sars cov
  • mental illness