Upward and Downward Counterfactual Thought After Loss: A multi-wave controlled longitudinal study

Publication date

2021-05

Authors

Eisma, Maarten CISNI 0000000419435653
Epstude, K.
Schut, H.A.W.ISNI 0000000367655733
Stroebe, M.S.ISNI 0000000063146913
Simion, A.
Boelen, Paul A.ISNI 000000004342164X

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

taverne

Abstract

Counterfactual thoughts, mental simulations about how a situation may have turned out differently (i.e., “if only …, then …”), can reduce mental health after stressful life-events. However, how specific counterfactual thought types relate to post-loss mental health problems is unclear. We hypothesized that self-referenced upward counterfactuals (i.e., “If only I had done …, then the current situation would be better”) may serve as cognitive avoidance, thereby perpetuating loss-related distress. Conversely, downward counterfactuals (i.e., “If … had happened, then the current situation could have been [even] worse”) may facilitate benefit finding, thereby reducing distress. In a longitudinal survey, self-referent, other-referent, and nonreferent upward counterfactuals, and nonreferent downward counterfactuals were assessed at baseline. Prolonged grief and depression symptoms were assessed at baseline, and 6- and 12-month follow-ups. Multiple regression analyses assessed associations between counterfactual thoughts and symptom levels in 65 recently bereaved people who generated counterfactual thoughts about the loss-event. Moderator analyses assessed the unicity of significant effects in the previous step, by comparing these effects in 59 people generating loss-related counterfactuals with those in 59 propensity-score matched participants generating counterfactuals about other negative life-events. Multivariate analyses showed that nonreferent upward counterfactuals were uniquely strongly positively associated with prolonged grief and depression symptoms concurrently. Self-referent upward counterfactuals were uniquely positively associated with prolonged grief and depression symptoms longitudinally. Moderator analyses confirmed that thinking about how one’s (in)actions could prevent a death uniquely exacerbated prolonged grief and depression severity. Prolonged grief treatment may be improved by targeting self-blame and guilt.

Keywords

complicated grief, persistent complex bereavement disorder, rumination, coping, regret, Emotion regulation, Taverne, Clinical Psychology, SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being

Citation

Eisma, M C, Epstude, K, Schut, H A W, Stroebe, M S, Simion, A & Boelen, P A 2021, 'Upward and Downward Counterfactual Thought After Loss : A multi-wave controlled longitudinal study', Behavior Therapy, vol. 52, no. 3, pp. 577-593. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.beth.2020.07.007