Changes in trauma-related cognitions and emotions after eliciting moral elevation: Examining the effects of viewing others' virtuous behavior on veterans with PTSD


Journal article


Adam P. McGuire, Joanna G. Fagan, Binh An Nguyen, Annika Wurm, Yvette Z. Szabo
Frontiers in Health Services, vol. 1, 2022, p. 831032


URL
Cite

Cite

APA   Click to copy
McGuire, A. P., Fagan, J. G., Nguyen, B. A., Wurm, A., & Szabo, Y. Z. (2022). Changes in trauma-related cognitions and emotions after eliciting moral elevation: Examining the effects of viewing others' virtuous behavior on veterans with PTSD. Frontiers in Health Services, 1, 831032. https://doi.org/10.3389/frhs.2021.831032


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
McGuire, Adam P., Joanna G. Fagan, Binh An Nguyen, Annika Wurm, and Yvette Z. Szabo. “Changes in Trauma-Related Cognitions and Emotions after Eliciting Moral Elevation: Examining the Effects of Viewing Others' Virtuous Behavior on Veterans with PTSD.” Frontiers in Health Services 1 (2022): 831032.


MLA   Click to copy
McGuire, Adam P., et al. “Changes in Trauma-Related Cognitions and Emotions after Eliciting Moral Elevation: Examining the Effects of Viewing Others' Virtuous Behavior on Veterans with PTSD.” Frontiers in Health Services, vol. 1, 2022, p. 831032, doi:10.3389/frhs.2021.831032.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{adam2022a,
  title = {Changes in trauma-related cognitions and emotions after eliciting moral elevation: Examining the effects of viewing others' virtuous behavior on veterans with PTSD},
  year = {2022},
  journal = {Frontiers in Health Services},
  pages = {831032},
  volume = {1},
  doi = {10.3389/frhs.2021.831032},
  author = {McGuire, Adam P. and Fagan, Joanna G. and Nguyen, Binh An and Wurm, Annika and Szabo, Yvette Z.}
}

Abstract

Moral elevation is described as feeling inspired after witnessing someone perform a virtuous act. Past work suggests the features of moral elevation may be contrary to PTSD, yet few studies have directly tested its impact on relevant symptoms. This experimental study assessed changes in trauma-related cognitions and emotions from after a trauma reminder task to after an elevation induction exercise. We hypothesized that higher elevation after the induction exercise would be associated with greater reductions in cognitions and emotions. Veterans with probable PTSD (N = 38) completed measures of trauma-related cognitions and emotions, once after a written trauma narrative exercise (T1) and again after watching two videos designed to elicit elevation (T2). Veterans also completed measures of state elevation after each video. Results suggest veterans experienced small, significant decreases in self-blame (d = 0.36) and negative beliefs about others (d = 0.46), and medium, significant decreases in guilt (d = 0.68), shame (d = 0.60), and negative beliefs about self (d = 0.69) between T1 and T2. As hypothesized, higher elevation was associated with significantly greater reductions in multiple outcomes above and beyond the effects of general positive affect. Specifically, there were medium effects for changes in shame (β = −0.42, SE = 0.17, p = 0.019, Δf2 = 0.25), negative view of others (β = −0.34, SE = 0.16, p = 0.044, Δf2 = 0.20), and a large effect for changes in negative view of self (β = −0.31, SE = 0.13, p = 0.019, Δf2 = 0.54). These findings suggest elevation may be well-suited to target trauma-related symptoms and future research should further examine its clinical utility.