knowledge of the disease, perceived social support, and cognitive appraisals in women with urinary incontinence

Clicks: 135
ID: 182547
2016
Social support and knowledge of the disease have been shown to facilitate adaptation to a chronic disease. However, the adaptation process is not fully understood. We hypothesized that these factors can contribute to better adaptation to the disease through their impact on disease-related cognitive appraisal. To analyze the links between social support and the knowledge of the disease, on one hand, and disease-related appraisals, on the other hand, one hundred fifty-eight women with stress UI, aged 32 to 79, took part in the study. Questionnaire measures of knowledge of UI, social support, and disease-related appraisals were used in the study. The level of knowledge correlated significantly negatively with the appraisal of the disease as Harm. The global level of social support correlated significantly positively with three disease-related appraisals: Profit, Challenge, and Value. Four subgroups of patients with different constellations of social support and knowledge of the disease were identified in cluster analysis and were demonstrated to differ significantly on four disease-related appraisals: Profit, Challenge, Harm, and Value. Different cognitive appraisals of UI may be specifically related to social support and knowledge of the disease, with social support affective positive disease-related appraisals, and the knowledge affecting the appraisal of Harm.
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szymona-pakowska2016biomedknowledge Use this key to autocite in the manuscript while using SciMatic Manuscript Manager or Thesis Manager
Authors ;Katarzyna Szymona-Pałkowska;Konrad Janowski;Agnieszka Pedrycz;Dariusz Mucha;Tadeusz Ambroży;Piotr Siermontowski;Jolanta Adamczuk;Marta Sapalska;Dawid Mucha;Janusz Kraczkowski
Journal spectrochimica acta - part a: molecular and biomolecular spectroscopy
Year 2016
DOI 10.1155/2016/3694792
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