0000000001222346

AUTHOR

Hina Ghafoor

showing 2 related works from this author

A cross‐cultural comparison of the roles of emotional intelligence, metacognition, and negative coping for health‐related quality of life in German v…

2018

Objectives Low emotional intelligence (EI) may predispose individuals to applying maladaptive coping strategies. This may maintain anxious worrying, which is highly prevalent in patients with chronic heart failure (CHF) and may affect mental (MCS) and physical component summaries (PCS) of health-related quality of life (HRQoL). Design The current study is a cross-sectional and cross-cultural survey. Methods N = 200 outpatients with CHF were recruited at cardiology institutes in Germany and Pakistan and assessed with self-report questionnaires. Results Path analysis (χ2 (4) = 7.59, p = .11, GFI = .99) revealed that the expected associations between low EI and lower SF-36 MCS and PCS of HRQoL…

Cross-Cultural ComparisonMaleCoping (psychology)Generalized anxiety disordermedia_common.quotation_subjectPsychological interventionMetacognition03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineGermanySurveys and QuestionnairesAdaptation PsychologicalmedicineHumansPakistan030212 general & internal medicineApplied PsychologyAgedEmotional Intelligencemedia_commonHeart Failure030505 public healthEmotional intelligenceGeneral MedicineMiddle Agedmedicine.diseasehumanitiesCross-Sectional StudiesChronic DiseaseQuality of LifeAnxietyFemaleSelf Reportmedicine.symptomWorryMetacognition0305 other medical sciencePsychologyPsychosocialClinical psychologyBritish Journal of Health Psychology
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Does religiosity ameliorate the negative impact of obsessive-compulsive disorder on self-esteem?

2018

ABSTRACTA core issue in obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) is the fear of losing control. Religion may help individuals with OCD to maintain their self-esteem despite the challenge of coping with the unpredictability of life. Data of N = 200 OCD outpatients were assessed via questionnaires at five government hospitals in Lahore, Pakistan. As predicted, high OCD significantly correlated with low self-esteem (r = −.20), and high religiosity was associated with high self-esteem (r = .18). Against the hypothesis, mediation analyses did not reveal an indirect effect of OCD on self-esteem via religiosity (b = −.02, p > .01), and OCD was associated with lowered religiosity (r = −.20). Sample char…

050103 clinical psychologyCoping (psychology)media_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesSelf-esteem050109 social psychologyReligiosityPsychiatry and Mental healthClinical PsychologySocial supportObsessive compulsive0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesPsychologymedia_commonClinical psychologyMental Health, Religion & Culture
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