Safely testing the alarm: Close others' responses to personal positive events.
VA Palo Alto Health Care System
Abstract
Previous research has shown that receiving social support in the face of negative events (i.e., enacted support) is sometimes correlated with positive outcomes, sometimes unrelated to outcomes, and sometimes associated with negative outcomes. However, people's perception that they have high-quality support available to them when they have a stressor (i.e., perceived support) is consistently and strongly associated with better health, well-being, and relationship functioning. However, both enacted and perceived support available in response to positive event disclosures are consistently associated with positive outcomes. In 2 studies, we examined why enacted support for negative events has such a spotty record…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 71.81
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 78
Authors
4Topics & keywords
- Psychology
- Social support
- Stressor
- Social psychology
- Perception
- Event (particle physics)
- Quality (philosophy)
- Clinical psychology