Role of Metaworry and Emotional Coping Across Metacognitive Beliefs and Well-Being:  A Gender Perspective

Article Title: Role of Metaworry and Emotional Coping Across Metacognitive Beliefs and Well-Being:  A Gender Perspective

Autor(s): Aisha Muneer and Jamil A. Malik

Institute(s): National Institute of Psychology, Quaid-i-Azam University, Islamabad.

Journal: Pakistan Journal of Psychological Research, 2018, Vol. 33, No. 2, 299-312

Correspondence Address: Aisha Muneer, Faculty of Humanities, COMSATS University, Islamabad, Pakistan. Email: aisha.kashif@comsats.edu.pk

Abstract

The current research aimed at exploring the moderating role of gender on the relationship between positive beliefs about rumination and negative well-being mediated serially by metaworry and emotion-oriented coping. A total of 514 employed professionals from different organizations completed Positive Beliefs about Rumination Scale, Anxious Thought Inventory, Coping Inventory for Stressful Situation, and Well-being Questionnaire-12. The findings showed positive relationships among study variables. Gender moderation was tested in both direct and indirect regression paths. The direct path between metaworry and emotion-oriented coping was moderated by gender. Positive beliefs about rumination were mediated by metaworry on emotion-oriented coping that further mediated effect of metaworry on negative well-being. The moderated mediations appeared to be significant for men only suggesting a moderating role of gender on direct and total effects. The indirect path from positive beliefs about rumination to negative well-being was serially mediated by metaworry and emotion coping for both men and women proposing absence of moderation by gender. The moderation in men within organizational settings proposed that despite holding positive metacognitive beliefs, the direct and total effects were significantly buffered in men for metaworry. However, emotion-oriented coping predicted negative well-being within organizational settings irrespective of gender category. The findings were suggestive of deleterious effects on well-being following an emotion focused approach within proactive environmental needs.

Keywords: Positive beliefs about rumination, emotion-oriented coping, metaworry, negative well-being

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