Article

Depressive Symptoms in Icelandic Elite Athletes: A Prospective Examination Through the Lens of the Response Styles Theory

Details

Citation

Tahtinen RE, Kristjánsdóttir H, þorgeirsson S, Oddsson HR, Saavedra JM & Morris R (2021) Depressive Symptoms in Icelandic Elite Athletes: A Prospective Examination Through the Lens of the Response Styles Theory. Psychology of Sport and Exercise, 56, Art. No.: 101964. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.psychsport.2021.101964

Abstract
The aim was to explore depressive symptoms through the response styles theory in Icelandic elite athletes using a longitudinal research design. A total of 79 Icelandic elite and national team athletes were included in the study (M= 23.5, SD=4.8, age range 18-37, females 75.9%). Higher perceived stress and brooding rumination (maladaptive response to negative mood) independently predicted higher depressive symptom scores over the study period. Athletes who reported higher brooding tendencies in the beginning of the study, were significantly more likely than those reporting lower tendencies, to report higher increases in depressive symptoms when stress levels increased over the study period. The findings supported the validity of exploring individual differences in depressive symptoms through the lens of the response styles theory in the athletes. Future research could explore the relationship between brooding rumination, athletic performance, and mental health issues, and test interventions targeting brooding rumination in athletes.

Keywords
Applied Psychology

Journal
Psychology of Sport and Exercise: Volume 56

StatusPublished
Publication date30/09/2021
Publication date online07/05/2021
Date accepted by journal03/05/2021
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/32607
PublisherElsevier BV
ISSN1469-0292

People (1)

People

Dr Robert Morris

Dr Robert Morris

Associate Professor, Sport