All Relations between Depression and shame

Publication Sentence Publish Date Extraction Date Species
Eftychia Platsidaki, Anargyros Kouris, Christos Christodoulo. Psychosocial Aspects in Patients With Chronic Leg Ulcers. Wounds : a compendium of clinical research and practice. vol 29. issue 10. 2018-06-15. PMID:29091039. patients with chronic leg ulcers frequently experience negative emotions such as shame, embarrassment, and loneliness, and they present higher levels of depression and anxiety compared with healthy individuals. 2018-06-15 2023-08-13 Not clear
Shaun Watson, Rapson Gomez, Eleonora Gullon. The Shame and Guilt Scales of the Test of Self-Conscious Affect-Adolescent (TOSCA-A): Factor Structure, Concurrent and Discriminant Validity, and Measurement and Structural Invariance Across Ratings of Males and Females. Assessment. vol 24. issue 4. 2018-04-23. PMID:26450945. also, shame correlated with depression positively and had no relation with empathy. 2018-04-23 2023-08-13 Not clear
Sevda Sarı, Faruk Gençö. Shame Experiences Underlying Depression of Adult Turkish Women. Qualitative health research. vol 26. issue 8. 2018-04-12. PMID:25823845. shame experiences underlying depression of adult turkish women. 2018-04-12 2023-08-13 human
Sevda Sarı, Faruk Gençö. Shame Experiences Underlying Depression of Adult Turkish Women. Qualitative health research. vol 26. issue 8. 2018-04-12. PMID:25823845. there are few qualitative studies aimed at understanding shame and its role for patients diagnosed with depression. 2018-04-12 2023-08-13 human
Sevda Sarı, Faruk Gençö. Shame Experiences Underlying Depression of Adult Turkish Women. Qualitative health research. vol 26. issue 8. 2018-04-12. PMID:25823845. in this research, we explored the origins of shame, and the coping strategies that patients diagnosed with depression employ to cope with shame. 2018-04-12 2023-08-13 human
Sevda Sarı, Faruk Gençö. Shame Experiences Underlying Depression of Adult Turkish Women. Qualitative health research. vol 26. issue 8. 2018-04-12. PMID:25823845. this qualitative research aimed at an in-depth analysis of shame experiences of adult women who had been diagnosed with depression and treated with cognitive behavioral psychotherapy in a women health center in turkey. 2018-04-12 2023-08-13 human
Si-Ning Yeo, Hani Zainal, Catherine S Tang, Eddie M Tong, Cyrus S Ho, Roger C H. Success/failure condition influences attribution of control, negative affect, and shame among patients with depression in Singapore. BMC psychiatry. vol 17. issue 1. 2018-03-05. PMID:28768488. success/failure condition influences attribution of control, negative affect, and shame among patients with depression in singapore. 2018-03-05 2023-08-13 Not clear
Si-Ning Yeo, Hani Zainal, Catherine S Tang, Eddie M Tong, Cyrus S Ho, Roger C H. Success/failure condition influences attribution of control, negative affect, and shame among patients with depression in Singapore. BMC psychiatry. vol 17. issue 1. 2018-03-05. PMID:28768488. this study examines: (1) success/failure condition as a moderator between depression and negative affect or shame, and (2) differences in control attribution between patients with depression and healthy controls in singapore. 2018-03-05 2023-08-13 Not clear
Alyssa Parisette-Sparks, Sara J Bufferd, Daniel N Klei. Parental Predictors of Children's Shame and Guilt at Age 6 in a Multimethod, Longitudinal Study. Journal of clinical child and adolescent psychology : the official journal for the Society of Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology, American Psychological Association, Division 53. vol 46. issue 5. 2018-02-07. PMID:26538055. fathers', but not mothers', history of depression and permissive parenting assessed when children were age 3 predicted children's expressions of shame and guilt when children were age 6; parents' marital dissatisfaction also predicted children's shame and guilt. 2018-02-07 2023-08-13 Not clear
Ignacio Lozano Verduzc. Barriers to Sexual Expression and Safe Sex Among Mexican Gay Men: A Qualitative Approach. American journal of men's health. vol 10. issue 4. 2018-01-26. PMID:25504646. these practices also produce a series of emotions such as guilt, shame, fear, and sadness that may develop into mental health issues such as depression and anxiety. 2018-01-26 2023-08-13 Not clear
Michèle D Birtel, Lisa Wood, Nancy J Kemp. Stigma and social support in substance abuse: Implications for mental health and well-being. Psychiatry research. vol 252. 2018-01-09. PMID:28237758. sixty-four participants in treatment for substance abuse (alcohol, drugs), aged between 18 and 64, completed an online survey measuring perceived stigma, internalized stigma, shame, perceived social support, and mental health and well-being (self-esteem, depression and anxiety, sleep). 2018-01-09 2023-08-13 human
Wilson Vincent, Xindi Fang, Sarah K Calabrese, Timothy G Heckman, Kathleen J Sikkema, Nathan B Hanse. HIV-related shame and health-related quality of life among older, HIV-positive adults. Journal of behavioral medicine. vol 40. issue 3. 2017-12-11. PMID:27904976. structural equation modeling tested whether hiv-related shame was associated with three dimensions of hrqol (physical, emotional, and social well-being) and whether there were significant indirect associations of hiv-related shame with the three hrqol dimensions via depression and loneliness in a sample of 299 plhiv ≥50 years old. 2017-12-11 2023-08-13 Not clear
Wilson Vincent, Xindi Fang, Sarah K Calabrese, Timothy G Heckman, Kathleen J Sikkema, Nathan B Hanse. HIV-related shame and health-related quality of life among older, HIV-positive adults. Journal of behavioral medicine. vol 40. issue 3. 2017-12-11. PMID:27904976. results showed that depression and loneliness were key mechanisms, with depression at least partially accounting for the association between hiv-related shame and both emotional and physical well-being, respectively, and loneliness accounting for the association between hiv-related shame and social well-being. 2017-12-11 2023-08-13 Not clear
Nadine Keen, Darren George, Peter Scragg, Emmanuelle Peter. The role of shame in people with a diagnosis of schizophrenia. The British journal of clinical psychology. vol 56. issue 2. 2017-11-29. PMID:28105670. to examine the role of shame and its relationship to depression in schizophrenia. 2017-11-29 2023-08-13 Not clear
Nadine Keen, Darren George, Peter Scragg, Emmanuelle Peter. The role of shame in people with a diagnosis of schizophrenia. The British journal of clinical psychology. vol 56. issue 2. 2017-11-29. PMID:28105670. it was predicted that individuals with a diagnosis of schizophrenia would exhibit higher levels of shame due to the stigma associated with their diagnosis, independently of depression levels, compared with psychiatric and medical control groups. 2017-11-29 2023-08-13 Not clear
Mek Wong, Mingyi Qia. The role of shame in emotional eating. Eating behaviors. vol 23. 2017-08-15. PMID:27448514. in the first study, 250 women (mean age: 29.95±8.78years; body mass index: 22.46±5.76) reported their experiences of one negative self-conscious emotion (shame), two negative non-self-conscious emotions (anxiety, depression), and emotional eating. 2017-08-15 2023-08-13 human
Mek Wong, Mingyi Qia. The role of shame in emotional eating. Eating behaviors. vol 23. 2017-08-15. PMID:27448514. with anxiety and depression controlled for, shame predicted depressive, anxious, angry, and positive emotional eating. 2017-08-15 2023-08-13 human
Vanessa Bayer, Jacalyn J Robert-McComb, James R Clopton, Darcy A Reic. Investigating the influence of shame, depression, and distress tolerance on the relationship between internalized homophobia and binge eating in lesbian and bisexual women. Eating behaviors. vol 24. 2017-07-07. PMID:27992763. first, it was hypothesized that shame and depression would mediate the relationship between internalized homophobia and binge eating. 2017-07-07 2023-08-13 human
Vanessa Bayer, Jacalyn J Robert-McComb, James R Clopton, Darcy A Reic. Investigating the influence of shame, depression, and distress tolerance on the relationship between internalized homophobia and binge eating in lesbian and bisexual women. Eating behaviors. vol 24. 2017-07-07. PMID:27992763. second, it was hypothesized that distress tolerance would moderate the relationship between shame and binge eating and the relationship between depression and binge eating in the mediation relationships proposed in the first hypothesis. 2017-07-07 2023-08-13 human
Vanessa Bayer, Jacalyn J Robert-McComb, James R Clopton, Darcy A Reic. Investigating the influence of shame, depression, and distress tolerance on the relationship between internalized homophobia and binge eating in lesbian and bisexual women. Eating behaviors. vol 24. 2017-07-07. PMID:27992763. results indicated that shame was a significant mediator for the relationship between internalized homophobia and binge eating, that depression was not a significant mediator, and that distress tolerance did not moderate the significant mediation relationship between shame and binge eating. 2017-07-07 2023-08-13 human