The self-regulatory model in women with rheumatoid arthritis: relationships between illness representations, coping strategies, and illness outcome

Authors:
CARLISLE Alexandra C. S., et al
Journal article citation:
British Journal of Health Psychology, 10(4), November 2005, pp.571-587.
Publisher:
Wiley

The self-regulatory model proposes that an individual's cognitive representations of illness threat (illness representations) influence the selection and performance of strategies to cope with that illness Also implicit in the model is the proposal that such coping strategies influence illness outcomes. These relationships represent a mediational model. The aim of the present study is to test the hypothesis that coping strategies partially mediate the relationship between illness representations and illness outcome in women with rheumatoid arthritis. The study is an observational cross-sectional design. Self-report measures of illness representations, coping strategies, and illness outcome were collected from 125 women with rheumatoid arthritis attending rheumatology outpatient clinics. Clinical measures of disease activity and severity were obtained from hospital records. Avoidant and resigned coping were found to partially mediate the relationship between symptom identity and the illness outcome measures of disability and psychiatric morbidity. As in other studies, strong relationships were found between illness representations and illness outcome. The finding that avoidant and resigned coping partially mediated the relationships between the illness representation dimension of symptom identity and two of the illness outcome measures (disability and psychiatric morbidity) provided some support for the hypothesis. However, the hypothesis was not fully supported, as coping did not partially mediate the relationship between any of the other illness representations and illness outcomes.

Subject terms:
models, outcomes, planning, arthritis, coping behaviour;
Content type:
research
Location(s):
United Kingdom
Link:
Journal home page
ISSN print:
1359-107X

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