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Dive into the research topics where Virginia Fernández-Fernández is active.

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Featured researches published by Virginia Fernández-Fernández.


The Journal of Psychology | 2012

Loneliness and Mental Health in a Representative Sample of Community-Dwelling Spanish Older Adults

Andrés Losada; María Márquez-González; Luis García-Ortiz; Manuel A. Gómez-Marcos; Virginia Fernández-Fernández; Emiliano Rodríguez-Sánchez

ABSTRACT Research seems to support loneliness as a risk factor for mental health problems in the elderly. Most studies analyzing the effects of loneliness on older adults’ mental health have relied on convenience samples. In this study, the prevalence and predictors of feelings of loneliness were studied in a representative sample of 272 community-dwelling Spanish older adults. The potential of feelings of loneliness to significantly contribute to the explanation of mental health of the elderly was also explored. The percentage of people reporting feelings of loneliness was 23.1%. Being a woman, being older, living alone, having fewer economic resources, having lower perceived health, and being dissatisfied with the frequency of contact with relatives and friends were found to be significant predictors of feelings of loneliness. Loneliness contributed significantly to the explanation of mental health, even when other significant variables were statistically controlled. The results of this study suggest that loneliness is a relevant factor for the analysis and understanding of mental health in the elderly.


International Psychogeriatrics | 2012

Psychometric properties of the Spanish version of the Geriatric Anxiety Inventory

María Márquez-González; Andrés Losada; Virginia Fernández-Fernández; Nancy A. Pachana

BACKGROUND The Geriatric Anxiety Inventory (GAI) was developed for assessing anxiety in older adults. The objectives of this work were: (a) to analyze the psychometric properties of the Spanish version of the GAI, and (b) to explore the associations between anxiety and other variables related to emotional distress (depression) and emotion regulation (rumination, experiential avoidance, and emotion suppression). METHODS Three-hundred-and-two people (75.5% female) aged 60 years and over living in the community participated in this study. Anxiety, depression, rumination, suppression and experiential avoidance were measured. RESULTS Three factors explaining 50.11% of the variance were obtained. The obtained internal consistency for the total scale was 0.91, with alphas ranging between 0.71 and 0.89 for the factors. Significant associations between all the GAI factors, the GAI total score, and depression, rumination, and experiential avoidance were found (all p < 0.01). Women reported higher scores than men for both the GAI total score and for all of the subscales. However, no significant gender differences were found between people with scores higher than the cut-off score for the GAI. CONCLUSIONS The results of this study suggest that the Spanish version of the GAI displays good psychometric properties. Further, our data suggest that the scale can be recommended for measuring anxiety in non-clinical older Spanish persons, and may be a useful instrument to be used in research studies aimed at analyzing anxiety and its correlates among older adults.


International Psychogeriatrics | 2015

Behavioral correlates of anxiety in well-functioning older adults

Andrés Losada; María Márquez-González; Nancy A. Pachana; Julie Loebach Wetherell; Virginia Fernández-Fernández; Celia Nogales-González; Miguel Ángel Ruiz-Díaz

BACKGROUND Research on the behavioral correlates of anxiety in older adults is sparse. The aim of this study was to explore the association of anxiety with behavioral patterns defined by health, activity, emotional and social variables. METHODS A convenience sample of 395 older adults completed measures of health, activity, emotions, social variables and experiential avoidance. Cross-sectional data were analysed using cluster analysis. RESULTS Five clusters were identified: active healthy, healthy, active vulnerable, lonely inactive and frail lonely. Participants in the active healthy and healthy clusters showed the highest scores on health variables (vitality and physical function), and adaptive scores on the rest of variables. They also reported the lowest scores on anxiety and included the lowest number of cases with clinically significant anxiety levels. Active vulnerable showed high scores on social support, leisure activities and capitalization on them but low scores in vitality and physical functioning. Participants in the lonely inactive cluster reported the highest mean score in experiential avoidance and high scores on boredom and loneliness, and low scores on social support, leisure activities capitalizing on pleasant activities and health variables. Frail lonely represent a particularly vulnerable profile of participants, similar to that of lonely inactive, but with significantly lower scores on health variables and higher scores on boredom and hours watching TV. CONCLUSIONS Anxiety in older adults is not only linked to poor health, but also to dysfunctional social behavior, loneliness, boredom and experiential avoidance. Maladaptive profiles of older adults with regard to these variables have been identified.


International Psychogeriatrics | 2014

Frequency of leisure activities and depressive symptomatology in elderly people: the moderating role of rumination

Virginia Fernández-Fernández; María Márquez-González; Andrés Losada-Baltar; Rosa Romero-Moreno

BACKGROUND The positive effects of leisure activities on depressive symptomatology are well known. However, the extent to which emotional regulation variables moderate that relationship has scarcely been studied, especially in older people. The aim of this study is to analyze the moderating role of rumination in the relation between leisure activities and depressive symptoms. METHODS Participants in this study were 311 people, aged 60 to 90 years (mean age: 71.27 years; SD: 6.99; 71.7% women). We evaluated depressive symptomatology, frequency of leisure activities, and rumination. We carried out a hierarchical regression analysis to confirm the moderating role of rumination. RESULTS We obtained a model that explains 39.4% of the variance of depressive symptomatology. Main effects were found for the frequency of leisure activities (β = -0.397; p < 0.01) and for rumination (β = 0.497; p < 0.01). Moreover, we found a significant effect of the interaction between frequency of leisure activities and rumination (β = 0.110; p < 0.05), suggesting that rumination plays a moderating role in the relation between leisure activities and depressive symptomatology. CONCLUSIONS A risk profile of elderly people may consist of those who engage in low levels of leisure activities but also use more frequently the dysfunctional emotional regulation strategy of rumination.


Revista Española de Geriatría y Gerontología | 2015

Rumiación y fusión cognitiva en el cuidado familiar de personas con demencia

Rosa Romero-Moreno; María Márquez-González; Andrés Losada; Virginia Fernández-Fernández; Celia Nogales-González

INTRODUCTION Rumination has been described as a dysfunctional coping strategy related to emotional distress. Recently, it has been highlighted from the Acceptance and Commitment Therapy therapeutic approach, the negative role that cognitive fusion (the extent to which we are psychologically tangled with and dominated by the form or content of our thoughts) has on the explanation of distress. The aim of this study is to simultaneously analyze the role of rumination and cognitive fusion in the caregiving stress process. MATERIAL AND METHODS The sample of 176 dementia caregivers was divided in four groups, taking into account their levels of rumination and cognitive fusion: HRHF=high rumination+high cognitive fusion; HRLF=high rumination+low cognitive fusion; LRHF= low rumination+high cognitive fusion; and LRLC=low rumination and low cognitive fusion. Caregiver stress factors, frequency of pleasant events, experiential avoidance, coherence and satisfaction with personal values, depression, anxiety and satisfaction with life, were measured. RESULTS The HRHF group showed higher levels of depression, anxiety, experiential avoidance and lower levels of satisfaction with life, frequency of pleasant events, coherence and satisfaction with personal values, than the other three groups. CONCLUSIONS Considering simultaneously rumination and cognitive fusion may contribute to a better understanding of caregiver coping and distress.


Journals of Gerontology Series B-psychological Sciences and Social Sciences | 2014

Leisure, Gender, and Kinship in Dementia Caregiving: Psychological Vulnerability of Caregiving Daughters With Feelings of Guilt

Rosa Romero-Moreno; Andrés Losada; María Oliva Márquez; Ken Laidlaw; Virginia Fernández-Fernández; Celia Nogales-González; Javier López


Spanish Journal of Psychology | 2012

Cross-Cultural Confirmatory Factor Analysis of the CES-D in Spanish and Mexican Dementia Caregivers

Andrés Losada; Mª de los Ángeles Villareal; Roberto Nuevo; María Márquez-González; Bertha C. Salazar; Rosa Romero-Moreno; Ana L. Carrillo; Virginia Fernández-Fernández


Behavioral Psychology-psicologia Conductual | 2014

Cognitive fusion in dementia caregiving: Psychometric properties of the Spanish version of the "Cognitive Fusion Questionnaire"

Rosa Romero-Moreno; María Márquez-González; Andrés Losada; David Gillanders; Virginia Fernández-Fernández


Revista Española de Geriatría y Gerontología | 2013

Diseño y validación de las escalas de evaluación del impacto psicológico de sucesos vitales pasados: el papel del pensamiento rumiativo y el crecimiento personal

Virginia Fernández-Fernández; María Márquez-González; Andrés Losada-Baltar; Pablo E. García; Rosa Romero-Moreno


Clínica y Salud | 2015

Atendiendo a las Variadas Problemáticas de los Cuidadores Familiares de Personas con Demencia: Aportaciones de la Terapia Cognitivo-Conductual y de la Terapia de Aceptación y Compromiso

Andrés Losada; María Márquez-González; Rosa Romero-Moreno; Javier López; Virginia Fernández-Fernández; Celia Nogales-González

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Andrés Losada

King Juan Carlos University

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Rosa Romero-Moreno

King Juan Carlos University

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Javier López

Complutense University of Madrid

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