Response styles to positive affect during a positive psychology intervention for veterans with PTSD and moral injury: Preliminary results from a moral elevation intervention pilot trial


Journal article


Adam P. McGuire, Madeline Rodenbaugh, Binh An N. Howard, Ateka A. Contractor
PsyArXiv Preprint, 2024


Cite

Cite

APA   Click to copy
McGuire, A. P., Rodenbaugh, M., Howard, B. A. N., & Contractor, A. A. (2024). Response styles to positive affect during a positive psychology intervention for veterans with PTSD and moral injury: Preliminary results from a moral elevation intervention pilot trial. PsyArXiv Preprint. https://doi.org/10.31234/osf.io/2w9q7


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
McGuire, Adam P., Madeline Rodenbaugh, Binh An N. Howard, and Ateka A. Contractor. “Response Styles to Positive Affect during a Positive Psychology Intervention for Veterans with PTSD and Moral Injury: Preliminary Results from a Moral Elevation Intervention Pilot Trial.” PsyArXiv Preprint (2024).


MLA   Click to copy
McGuire, Adam P., et al. “Response Styles to Positive Affect during a Positive Psychology Intervention for Veterans with PTSD and Moral Injury: Preliminary Results from a Moral Elevation Intervention Pilot Trial.” PsyArXiv Preprint, 2024, doi:10.31234/osf.io/2w9q7.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{adam2024a,
  title = {Response styles to positive affect during a positive psychology intervention for veterans with PTSD and moral injury: Preliminary results from a moral elevation intervention pilot trial},
  year = {2024},
  journal = {PsyArXiv Preprint},
  doi = {10.31234/osf.io/2w9q7},
  author = {McGuire, Adam P. and Rodenbaugh, Madeline and Howard, Binh An N. and Contractor, Ateka A.}
}

Abstract

Objective: Veterans with PTSD or moral injury are at risk of maladaptive response styles to positive emotions, such as emotional numbing. A potential pathway to target problematic responses to positive affect is a positive psychology intervention that elicits moral elevation—feeling inspired after witnessing someone perform a virtuous act. This study aims to examine responses to positive affect in a pilot trial of a web-based moral elevation intervention titled, MOVED. Method: Veterans who reported moral injury distress and probable PTSD were randomized into an intervention or control condition (n=48). We examined repeated measures data during the trial and focused on three subscales of the Response to Positive Affect Questionnaire: rumination on positive mood and somatic experiences (emotion-focus), rumination on positive aspects of the self and pursuit of relevant goals (self-focus), and efforts to dampen positive moods (dampening). Three multilevel models were fitted with time and condition as predictors, and subscale scores as outcomes. Qualitative data reported at intervention sessions was also reviewed and coded based on the three subscales. Results: Veterans in the MOVED condition reported more positive rumination than the control condition for both emotion-focus (b=2.70, p=.023) and self-focus styles (b=2.90, p=.003). There was no group difference in the dampening style. Qualitative responses after elevation-eliciting exercises and session-based goals were most frequently coded as including emotion-focused positive rumination, followed by dampening, then self-focused rumination. Conclusion: These results provide preliminary evidence that a moral elevation intervention might contribute to positive responses to positive affect in a sample predisposed to emotional numbing.


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