Chris Segrin’s research while affiliated with University of Arizona and other places

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Publications (100)


Autonomy and overparenting: Are parents of emerging adults being responsive?
  • Article

January 2024

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52 Reads

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2 Citations

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Margaret Jane Pitts

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Chris Segrin

Recognizing the various negative consequences of overparenting for the child such as poor mental health and relationship quality and delayed transition to full adulthood, this study examined to what extent parents of emerging adults were being responsive and tailoring their parenting practices to meet their child's characteristics, such as need for autonomy and trait autonomy. Survey data from 256 parent‐emerging adult child dyads were used for analyses. The results showed that parent‐reported overparenting was not associated with child‐reported autonomy features. Nevertheless, parents engaged in lower levels of tangible assistance and higher levels of advice/affect management if they perceived their child as high in autonomy need or trait autonomy. Collectively, these findings suggest that parents might practice overparenting out of their own desires and needs rather than taking into account their child's developmental needs and traits. Practical recommendations for family therapists are offered.



Disrupted Sojourn and Forced Reentry: A Qualitative Inquiry of College Students’ Experiences, Stressors, and Coping Strategies After Returning Home During the COVID-19 Pandemic
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  • Full-text available

March 2023

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25 Reads

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2 Citations

Frontiers: The Interdisciplinary Journal of Study Abroad

This study explores the unique experience of disrupted sojourns and early reentry among U.S. college students who were abruptly repatriated from their study abroad experience in March 2020. Using a combination of focus groups and interviews with 25 U.S. returning students, the findings suggest that students’ experiences were characterized by themes of accelerated reentry and a deep grieving process, as well as numerous financial, academic, interpersonal, and COVID-19 related stressors. The findings also highlight returning students’ coping strategies of staying busy, seeking social support, and reframing the situation under a positive light. This research provides insights into the challenges and adjustments associated with a heretofore unstudied phenomenon of early reentry among returning students. Important practical implications for study abroad programs and administrators who might face additional cases of early reentry due to the uncertainty of the pandemic are discussed.

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Neighborhood Disadvantage Has an Indirect Effect on Problem Drinking Through Increased Psychological Distress

February 2023

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34 Reads

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6 Citations

Objective: Neighborhood disadvantage has been documented as a risk factor for problem drinking. The specific aim of this investigation is to test a model of neighborhood disadvantage, psychological distress, and problem drinking in a demographically and socioeconomically diverse sample. Method: A sample of 618 adults (21–65-year-olds; Mage = 30.80, SD = 9.81; 58% female) who reported drinking alcohol at least once in the past 6 months, completed an online questionnaire with questions about psychological distress (depression, stress, social isolation) and problem drinking (drinking problems, drinking to cope, binge drinking) twice over the course of 6 months. Their data were merged with the American Community Survey data from the U.S. Census Bureau to form an index of neighborhood disadvantage (median income, % residents with less than high school education, % living in poverty, % receiving income assistance). Results: A structural equation modeling analysis showed that neighborhood disadvantage was associated with increases in psychological distress during the T1–T2 interval. Psychological distress was also positively associated with problem drinking at both T1 and T2. There was an indirect effect of neighborhood disadvantage on problem drinking through increased psychological distress. However, there was no direct effect of neighborhood disadvantage on problem drinking in this sample. Conclusions: Increased psychological distress may be a key mechanism that links living in disadvantaged neighborhoods and problem drinking.


Neighborhood disadvantage and mental health

September 2022

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18 Reads

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1 Citation

“Neighborhood disadvantage” is a term used to describe impoverished living conditions evident in one's immediate environment. There is a substantial body of empirical evidence that establishes an association between living in disadvantaged neighborhoods and mental health problems. Neighborhood disadvantage has been linked with problems such as depression, anxiety, loneliness, alcohol abuse, and schizophrenia. Most theories designed to explain these associations focus on stress, the community's lack of control over its residence for the public good, and the downward mobility of people suffering from mental illness into impoverished living conditions. Some longitudinal research suggests that neighborhood disadvantage may exert a causal effect on poor mental health in some cases.


When goodbyes matter: The conditional relationship between final conversations and symptoms of depression

August 2022

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17 Reads

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1 Citation

An online survey of 528 people who lost someone close to them in the last 5 years was used to test associations between having final conversations (FCs) and depression. The direct effect was nonsignificant, but there were two significant moderation effects. Time since bereavement moderated the FC–depression relationship; there was a negative relationship between FCs and depression shortly following bereavement, but no relationship after more time had passed. The age of the deceased also moderated this relationship; there was a negative relationship between FCs and depression when the deceased was older, but no relationship when the deceased was younger.


Unique Effects of Psychological Distress in Victimization and Perpetration of Intimate Partner Violence

August 2022

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31 Reads

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2 Citations

Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology

Introduction: Intimate partner violence (IPV) reliably co-occurs with psychological distress. However, understanding the precise nature of the association between these two classes of variables, as potential cause or effect, is complicated by the fact that victimization of IPV is not often studied controlling for simultaneous perpetration, and vice versa. It is therefore important to control for one form of IPV when testing predictors of the other to accurately understand the extent to which psychological distress may predispose people to these serious interpersonal problems. Method: Two national survey studies were conducted to test the unique associations between victimization and perpetration of IPV with psychological distress. In the first study, 773 adults completed survey measures of IPV (victimization and perpetration) and psychological distress (depression and stress). In the second study, 389 participants completed the same measures as in Study 1, but at two waves separated by three months (T1-T2 follow-up rate 73%). Results: In study 1, both depression and stress were concurrently associated with perpetrating IPV, when controlling for victimization. However, only depression was associated with victimization, after controlling for perpetration. Results of study 2 showed that both depression and stress are prospectively associated with IPV victimization. However, they are not prospectively associated with IPV perpetration, net the effect of IPV victimization. Discussion: These results are consistent with the interactional model of depression by showing that people with depression, and high levels of stress, are at heightened risk for experiencing IPV, even after controlling for their own propensity to enact IPV.


Mediation: general health, spiritual well-being, and loneliness. Note. Figure values are unstandardized regression coefficients. Coefficient in () is the indirect effect. * p < .05. *** p < .001
Moderated mediation: indirect effect of spirituality on perceived health varies as a function of age, where age is moderating the path from spirituality to loneliness. Note. Figure values are unstandardized regression coefficients. Coefficient in () is the indirect effect. * p < .05. *** p < .001
Moderated mediation: indirect effect of spirituality on health varies as a function of age, where age is moderating the path from loneliness to perceived health. Note. Figure values are unstandardized regression coefficients. Coefficient in () is the indirect effect. * p < .05. *** p < .001
Exploring the relationship between loneliness, spirituality, and health-related quality of life in Hispanic cancer caregivers

June 2022

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168 Reads

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9 Citations

Supportive Care in Cancer

Caregivers of cancer patients find it challenging to perform their roles and to meet the demands of caregiving. Spirituality has been investigated as a potential coping strategy employed by caregivers, yet spirituality and related practices vary among cultural groups. In this study, we investigated the relationship between spirituality and health-related quality of life (HRQOL) and evaluated mediation effects of loneliness on this relationship. The sample was 234 lower socioeconomic status (SES) Hispanic caregivers of breast cancer survivors using existing data from the Support for Latinas with Breast Cancer and Their Intimate and Family Partners study, funded by the American Cancer Society (Badger, PI). A cross-sectional analysis was conducted at baseline, using self-reported spirituality, loneliness, and HRQOL data collected from 2012 to 2017. The exposures and outcomes were assessed using the Spiritual Well-Being Scale, the Social Isolation—Short Form 8a PROMIS Item Bank v2.0 scale, and the Global Health Scale PROMIS v.1.0/1.1 scale. Descriptive and mediation analyses using the Preacher and Hayes’ approach were conducted to estimate the direct effect of spirituality on HRQOL and the indirect effect of spirituality through mediation of loneliness in relation to HRQOL. A positive association between spirituality and HRQOL was found, whereas loneliness was inversely associated with HRQOL ( b = − .18, SE = .03, p < .0001). Age did not function as a moderator of the spirituality-HRQOL association in any of the models tested, but in the model testing mediation, loneliness was shown to mediate the association between spirituality and HRQOL ( b = − .17, p < .0001). These results suggest that spirituality may be beneficial to HRQOL in caregivers of Hispanic breast cancer survivors, due in part to reduced loneliness among more spiritual caregivers.


Patterns of Intimacy Crisis Resolution and Their Associations With Romantic Loneliness in Polish and U.S. Young Adults

April 2022

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264 Reads

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5 Citations

In Erikson's model of development, intimacy and isolation denote polar outcomes of psychosocial crisis in young adulthood. Drawing on this model, the present study used three-wave longitudinal data to examine patterns of the success and lack of success in the resolution of Eriksonian crisis in relation to romantic loneliness as a negative outcome of the intimacy crisis, and compared across Poland and the United States. The data were collected from Polish and U.S. individuals aged 18-40 for Wave 1 (N = 763). Four patterns of the Eriksonian intimacy crisis were identified: (a) stable partnered status; (b) stable single status; (c) transition from single to partnered status; (d) transition from partnered to single status. In both countries, transition from single to partnered status was related to decreased romantic loneliness. Greater initial romantic loneliness was observed among Polish single adults who transited to partnered status in contrast to stable single adults. In turn, the U.S. partnered adults who transited to single status initially experienced lower romantic loneliness than stable single adults. Bivariate latent growth curve models pairing romantic loneliness with relationship satisfaction revealed that higher initial relationship satisfaction was associated with lower initial romantic loneliness, and a greater increase in relationship satisfaction was associated with smaller increases in romantic loneliness. The findings highlight that different resolutions of the intimacy crisis are related to diverse romantic loneliness and relationship satisfaction trajectories and these associations also appear to differ as a function of various marital and loneliness contexts in Poland and the United States. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).


The Association Between Social Adversity and Alcohol Consumption Is Moderated by Social Support

August 2021

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17 Reads

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2 Citations

The self-medication model predicts that people consume alcohol to manage problems with social relationships and negative affect. The social support buffering model predicts that the availability of social support should weaken the association between various forms of stress and alcohol consumption as a means of coping with distress. The objective of this research was to test associations between five different forms of social adversity (discrimination and family conflict in Study 1 and daily hassles, social isolation, and interpersonal violence in Studies 2 and 3) and alcohol consumption and whether that association was moderated by social support. Studies 1 (N = 773) and 2 (N = 291) tested these hypotheses in national surveys of adults who drank alcohol at least once in the past year. Results showed that all five forms of social adversity were positively associated with alcohol consumption. Social support was a consistent moderator of this association, but in the opposite direction as predicted by the buffering model. In these samples, the association between social adversity and alcohol consumption was highest under conditions of the highest social support. Study 3 (N = 389) was a longitudinal study that replicated the paradoxical moderation by social support prospectively, but in only one of the six models tested. There is a robust concurrent association between social adversity and alcohol consumption, but social support does not lessen this relationship, as predicted by the buffering model.


Citations (86)


... Changes in traditional perspectives on women's and men's roles also affect individuals' status within the family and their approaches to raising children (Akgöz Aktaş and Aydin 2020). Since the PHPA which have recently gained popularity and are different from other parenting styles, have been studied on adolescents with relatively few studies (Wang and Hawk 2023;Wu et al. 2023;Zhang and Wang 2024) or have been studied on university students or adult samples (Jiao et al. 2024;Kwon et al. 2017), the discussion on the subject has been made on the characteristics of this parenting style. More studies are needed that directly examine this parenting style and compare its effects on adolescents. ...

Reference:

Digital Addiction, Perceived Helicopter Parental Attitudes and Dissociative Experiences: Examining Relationality in Adolescents
Autonomy and overparenting: Are parents of emerging adults being responsive?
  • Citing Article
  • January 2024

... We acknowledge these perceptions do not take into account some complex issues which the FCDO would have been grappling with, such as the ability to Medevac, failings in country health systems and duty of care requirements. Previous literature has discussed the potential distress involved during abrupt repatriations, including studies on migrant workers [42] and college students who had been studying abroad [26]. Our findings support the idea that experiencing such a sudden change during an already uncertain and stressful time can be detrimental to individuals' psychological wellbeing. ...

Disrupted Sojourn and Forced Reentry: A Qualitative Inquiry of College Students’ Experiences, Stressors, and Coping Strategies After Returning Home During the COVID-19 Pandemic

Frontiers: The Interdisciplinary Journal of Study Abroad

... These findings are contrary to existing evidence linking high individual economic stressors and neighborhood risk to problematic alcohol use (Edmonds et al., 2022;Peirce, Frone, Russell, & Cooper, 1996). However, they corroborate those from studies demonstrating null associations between individual economic stressors and alcohol use and community risk and drinking problems (Peirce et al., 1994;Segrin, Cooper, & Jiao, 2023), as well as others demonstrating reduced odds of current drinking attributable to high disadvantage in specific demographic subgroups (Karriker-Jaffe et al., 2012). Consistent with the literature, high past year misuse was associated with worse MHRQoL (Avis, Colvin, Bromberger, & Hess, 2018;Brière, Rohde, Seeley, Klein, & Lewinsohn, 2014;Lasserre et al., 2022), both in the full model and in the first sensitivity analysis that controlled for prior MHRQoL. ...

Neighborhood Disadvantage Has an Indirect Effect on Problem Drinking Through Increased Psychological Distress

... This rather counterintuitive finding might be attributed to the null findings explained above since they additionally create a vulnerability to noise in the dataset, allowing spurious relations to dominate the measured relationship. Other research suggests that the composite socio-economic status (SES) of the neighbourhood might be negatively associated with mental health (Segrin & Amanda Cooper, 2023;Sui et al., 2022) in addition to the influence of individual SES. Our results might represent this effect since the studied satellite districts not only have a low composite socio-economic status but were also built according to the urban design principles of modernism with much more green space between the buildings compared to other parts of the city. ...

Neighborhood disadvantage and mental health
  • Citing Chapter
  • September 2022

... 2 For an acute event, panicking and not having time to say goodbye to a loved one in an unexpected situation may contribute to anxiety and depression. 22 Additionally, most family members experience a sensation of unreality and confusion when they first see their relative in the ICU. 23 In the first stage, the family member is not able to understand what is happening, as one of our interviewees described this condition: ...

When goodbyes matter: The conditional relationship between final conversations and symptoms of depression
  • Citing Article
  • August 2022

... Research has shown that sexual forms of IPV are also associated with higher rates of psychological distress, anxiety, and depression. 58,59 Forced condomless sex directly places SMM at greater risk for HIV or STI transmission. 60,61 Finally, and more insidiously, sexual IPV may also undermine one's sense of agency and ability to advocate for safety in sexual situations. ...

Unique Effects of Psychological Distress in Victimization and Perpetration of Intimate Partner Violence
  • Citing Article
  • August 2022

Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology

... Relationship dismissal, on the other hand, represents a belief in the lesser importance of a romantic relationship in one's life, often seen as an obstacle to an individual's life plans, and the prioritisation of personal goals over romantic commitments (Watkins & Beckmeyer, 2020). A recent study of a sample of Polish adults found that single individuals reported lower relationship desire and higher relationship dismissal than coupled individuals (Adamczyk et al., 2022). In addition, emerging adults who placed greater importance on romantic relationships in their lives were more satisfied with their romantic experiences, whereas emerging adults with higher relationship dismissal reported a lower number of romantic relationships in their lives and higher cycling in their current relationship (Watkins & Beckmeyer, 2020). ...

Patterns of Intimacy Crisis Resolution and Their Associations With Romantic Loneliness in Polish and U.S. Young Adults

... Moreover, religious and spiritual needs also impact treatment decisions and planning [55]. Among Hispanics, spirituality and religious engagement significantly influence how patients with cancer and caregivers cope, offering emotional support and improving their quality of life [56]. Additionally, regardless of how often they attend religious services, participating in spiritual practices and holding spiritual beliefs may impact the health and psychosocial well-being of Hispanics coping with cancer [56]. ...

Exploring the relationship between loneliness, spirituality, and health-related quality of life in Hispanic cancer caregivers

Supportive Care in Cancer

... Despite the consensus that social support can facilitate positive outcomes in recovery from substance use, the link between social support and alcohol consumption in the general population is less clear. For example, Segrin and Cooper [30] found that social adversity is a risk factor for problematic alcohol consumption and that social support intensified this relationship. These findings were attributed to two possible explanations, including the potential for unwanted social support to increase stress and/or socialisation by peers to respond to stress by increasing alcohol consumption. ...

The Association Between Social Adversity and Alcohol Consumption Is Moderated by Social Support

... With the continuous enrichment of social media functionalities, there is a trend of expansion from a social tool to an educational tool (Zhao et al., 2021). Social media has become an important platform for knowledge sharing and learning at both individual and organizational levels, particularly during the three years of the COVID-19 lockdown in China, where the educational function of social media has become more prominent. ...

When and why we disclose distress on SNSs: Perceived affordances, disclosure goals, and anticipated negative evaluations
  • Citing Article
  • July 2021

Computers in Human Behavior