Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Charles J. Holahan is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Charles J. Holahan.


Journal of Personality and Social Psychology | 1987

Personal and contextual determinants of coping strategies.

Charles J. Holahan; Rudolf H. Moos

This study examined personal and contextual predictors of active and avoidance coping strategies in a community sample of over 400 adults and in a sample of over 400 persons entering psychiatric treatment for unipolar depression. Sociodemographic factors of education and income (except for active-cognitive coping), personality dispositions of self-confidence and an easy-going manner, and contextual factors of negative life events and family support each made a significant incremental contribution to predicting active and avoidance coping. Among both healthy adults and patients, active and avoidance coping were positively associated with negative life events. Individuals who had more personal and environmental resources were more likely to rely on active coping and less likely to use avoidance coping. Moreover, for both groups, most of the predictors continued to show significant relations with active and avoidance coping strategies even after the stable component in coping was controlled in a longitudinal design. A comprehensive framework to understand the determinants of coping can be of practical value in suggesting points for therapeutic interventions aimed at fostering more adaptive coping efforts.


Journal of Personality and Social Psychology | 1986

Personality, coping, and family resources in stress resistance: a longitudinal analysis.

Charles J. Holahan; Rudolf H. Moos

Earlier cross-sectional analyses have made causal inferences about stress-resistance variables problematic. This study used a longitudinal analysis where stress-resistance factors in the areas of personality, coping, and family support assessed at an initial testing were used to predict psychological and physical adjustment one year later, controlling for initial adjustment. The study involved a survey of 245 men and 248 women in randomly selected families in the San Francisco Bay area. Findings demonstrated that feelings of self-confidence, an easy-going disposition, a disinclination to use avoidance coping, and the availability of family support operate jointly to protect individuals from negative psychological consequences of life stress. For women the stress-resistance index also predicted psychosomatic complaints experienced one year after initial testing.


Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology | 2005

Stress Generation, Avoidance Coping, and Depressive Symptoms: A 10-Year Model.

Charles J. Holahan; Rudolf H. Moos; Carole K. Holahan; Penny L. Brennan; Kathleen K. Schutte

This study examined (a) the role of avoidance coping in prospectively generating both chronic and acute life stressors and (b) the stress-generating role of avoidance coping as a prospective link to future depressive symptoms. Participants were 1,211 late-middle-aged individuals (500 women and 711 men) assessed 3 times over a 10-year period. As predicted, baseline avoidance coping was prospectively associated with both more chronic and more acute life stressors 4 years later. Furthermore, as predicted, these intervening life stressors linked baseline avoidance coping and depressive symptoms 10 years later, controlling for the influence of initial depressive symptoms. These findings broaden knowledge about the stress-generation process and elucidate a key mechanism through which avoidance coping is linked to depressive symptoms.


Health Psychology | 1995

Social support, coping, and depressive symptoms in a late-middle-aged sample of patients reporting cardiac illness.

Charles J. Holahan; Rudolf H. Moos; Carole K. Holahan; Penny L. Brennan

This study tests a 1-year predictive model of depressive symptoms in a late-middle-aged sample of patients reporting diagnoses of cardiac illness. Results based on 325 individuals (248 men and 77 women) diagnosed with chronic cardiac illness, 71 individuals (52 men and 19 women) diagnosed with acute cardiac illness, and 219 healthy controls (129 men and 90 women) strongly supported the hypotheses. Compared with healthy persons, individuals with chronic and those with acute cardiac illness reported more depressive symptoms at follow-up. Women overall showed more depressive symptoms than did men, and women with cardiac illness were particularly vulnerable to behavioral manifestations of depressive symptoms. Integrative time-lag and prospective structural equation models indicated that, for individuals with cardiac illness, social support and adaptive coping strategies predicted fewer depressive symptoms.


Journal of Personality and Social Psychology | 1995

Reassurance seeking, stress generation, and depressive symptoms: An integrative model

John G. Potthoff; Charles J. Holahan; Thomas E. Joiner

The purpose of this study was to examine a mechanism through which interpersonal vulnerability factors may be linked with depressive symptoms by integrating a stress-generation model with an interpersonal theory of depression. The proposed conceptual framework was tested with 267 college students in a prospective structural equation model with 3 assessments over a 5-week period. Results supported all hypotheses. Initial depressive symptoms and initial reassurance seeking style were positively associated, and initial depressive symptoms were positively related to the occurrence of subsequent minor social stressors. Finally, a reassurance-seeking style was positively related to outcome depressive symptoms indirectly through minor social stressors. As predicted, stress generation operated as a mediating mechanism linking an initial reassurance-seeking style to subsequent depressive symptoms.


Journal of Personality and Social Psychology | 1990

Life stressors, resistance factors, and improved psychological functioning: an extension of the stress resistance paradigm.

Charles J. Holahan; Rudolf H. Moos

This study applied a set of factors previously identified as being linked with stress resistance to the prediction of both stable and improved psychological functioning over a 1-year interval with more than 400 community-resident adults. Stable psychological functioning under high stressors is predicted at the beginning of the year by personal and social resources that are linked to functioning through their influence on increased approach coping during the year. In contrast, improved psychological functioning under low stressors is predicted directly by initial resources. As predicted by crisis theory, improved functioning under high stressors is related to an increase in resources during the year. The findings are discussed in the context of an extension of the stress-resistance paradigm beyond illness prevention toward a general, adaptively oriented health framework.


Journal of Personality and Social Psychology | 1997

Social context, coping strategies, and depressive symptoms: an expanded model with cardiac patients.

Charles J. Holahan; Rudolf H. Moos; Carole K. Holahan; Penny L. Brennan

This research broadened and refined a resources model of coping to encompass negative as well as positive aspects of social relationships and examined this expanded conceptualization in a 4-year prospective model with 183 cardiac patients (140 men and 43 women). Social support and social stressors in the family and extrafamily domains contributed significantly to a common social context latent construct. In addition, this conceptualization of social context was significantly related to depressive symptoms 4 years later. Especially important conceptually, coping strategies functioned as a mechanism through which both social support and social stressors related to subsequent depressive symptoms. Moreover, positive and negative aspects of social relationships made essentially unique contributions in predicting subsequent coping efforts.


Journal of Personality and Social Psychology | 1994

Social Support, Appraisals of Event Controllability, and Coping: An Integrative Model

David P. Valentiner; Charles J. Holahan; Rudolf H. Moos

An integrative model of mediating and moderating mechanisms in the coping process was examined in a 2-year prospective framework with 175 college students using both single-group and multigroup LISREL analyses. Consistent with the hypothesized model, initial parental support was associated with subsequent changes in psychological adjustment both directly and indirectly through adaptive coping strategies. Moreover, as predicted, appraisals of event controllability moderated both the degree to which parental support influenced coping and the effectiveness of coping responses. With controllable events, family support predicted adaptive coping, and coping predicted changes in adjustment. With uncontrollable events, family support related directly to changes in adjustment


Journal of Personality and Social Psychology | 1999

Resource loss, resource gain, and depressive symptoms: a 10-year model.

Charles J. Holahan; Rudolf H. Moos; Carole K. Holahan; Ruth C. Cronkite

This study examined a broadened conceptualization of the stress and coping process that incorporated a more dynamic approach to understanding the role of psychosocial resources in 326 adults studied over a 10-year period. Resource loss across 10 years was significantly associated with an increase in depressive symptoms, whereas resource gain across 10 years was significantly associated with a decrease in depressive symptoms. In addition, change in the preponderance of negative over positive events across 10 years was inversely associated with change in resources during the period. Finally, in an integrative structural equation model, the association between change in life events and depressive symptoms at follow-up was completely mediated through resource change.


American Journal of Community Psychology | 1982

Social support and adjustment: Predictive benefits of social climate indices.

Charles J. Holahan; Rudolf H. Moos

This study estimates the relationship between social support and physical and psychological adjustment, using measures that afford a qualitative assessment of social support. Qualitative indices of social support in family (Family Relationships Index) and work (Work Relationships Index) environments were derived from available social climate measures. Respondents were a randomly selected community sample of 267 male and 267 female adult family members. Results support hypotheses that qualitative measures of support in family and work environments predict psychosomatic complaints and depression after variance due to negative life change and quantitative measures of social support is accounted for. While the work environment is a more important source of support for men than women, the family environment provides an especially potent source of support for unemployed women.

Collaboration


Dive into the Charles J. Holahan's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Carole K. Holahan

University of Texas at Austin

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Penny L. Brennan

VA Palo Alto Healthcare System

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Rebecca J. North

University of Texas at Austin

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kathleen K. Schutte

VA Palo Alto Healthcare System

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Brian L. Wilcox

University of Texas at Austin

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Xiaoyin Li

University of Texas at Austin

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Brent A. Kenney

University of Texas at Austin

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Daniel A. Powers

University of Texas at Austin

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge