| Literature DB >> 27473375 |
Peter Joseph Jongen1,2, Marco Heerings3, Rob Ruimschotel4, Astrid Hussaarts3, Lotte Duyverman4, Anneke van der Zande3, Joyce Valkenburg-Vissers5, Maarten van Droffelaar3, Wim Lemmens6, Rogier Donders6, Leo H Visser7,8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In persons with multiple sclerosis (MS) self-efficacy positively affects health-related quality of life (HRQoL) and physical activity. In a previous study we observed that 6 months after an intensive 3-day social cognitive treatment (Can Do treatment) with the participation of support partners, self-efficacy and HRQoL had improved in persons with relapsing remitting MS (RRMS). Given the chronic nature of the disease, it is important to know whether these beneficial changes may last.Entities:
Keywords: Anxiety; Autonomy; Cognitive; Depression; Fatigue; Multiple sclerosis; Participation; Quality of life; Self-efficacy; Social
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27473375 PMCID: PMC4966822 DOI: 10.1186/s13104-016-2173-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Res Notes ISSN: 1756-0500
Mean (standard deviation) values at baseline and 12 months after the Can Do treatment with relative difference (percentage of baseline) (mean, standard error of the mean) and P value for comparison (paired t-test) for self-efficacy [multiple sclerosis self-efficacy scale (MSSES)], impact on participation and autonomy [impact on participation and autonomy questionnaire (IPA)], HRQoL [multiple sclerosis quality of life-54 Items (MSQoL-54)], anxiety and depression [Hospital anxiety and depression scale (HADS)], and fatigue [modified fatigue impact scale-5 items (MFIS-5)] in the relapsing remitting group (N = 22); Δ, difference
| Relapsing remitting group | Baseline | 12th month | % Δ | P |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| MSSES function (N = 21) | 80.86 (15.00) | 79.58 (16.24) | −0.68 (3.00) | 0.708 |
| MSSES control (N = 21) | 57.68 (19.29) | 64.02 (15.81) | +20.21 (7.83) | 0.012 |
| IPA limitations (N = 22) | 2.40 (0.60) | 2.28 (0.60) | −0.53 (7.41) | 0.356 |
| IPA problems (N = 20) | 1.97 (0.37) | 1.75 (0.51) | −8.38 (5.51) | 0.075 |
| MSQoL-54 physical (N = 11) | 56.87 (11.93) | 59.85 (18.68) | +14.99 (7.09) | 0.032 |
| MSQoL-54 mental (N = 17) | 55.98 (11.82) | 63.47 (14.12) | +17.38 (8.16) | 0.087 |
| HADS anxiety (N = 22) | 7.23 (3.45) | 5.50 (3.16) | −25.89 (8.64) | 0.044 |
| HADS depression (N = 22) | 5.59 (3.62) | 3.86 (3.23) | −29.76 (14.53) | 0.042 |
| MFIS-5 (N = 22) | 12.09 (3.95) | 9.95 (3.77) | −19.82 (7.34) | 0.080 |
Mean (standard deviation) values at baseline and 12 months after the Can Do treatment with relative difference (percentage of baseline) (mean, standard error of the mean) and P value for comparison (paired t-test) for self-efficacy [multiple sclerosis self-efficacy scale (MSSES)], impact on participation and autonomy [impact on participation and autonomy questionnaire (IPA)], HRQoL [multiple sclerosis quality of life-54 items (MSQoL-54)], anxiety and depression [Hospital anxiety and depression scale (HADS)], and fatigue [(modified fatigue impact scale-5 items (MFIS-5)] in the progressive group (N = 14); Δ, difference
| Progressive group (N = 14) | Baseline | 12th month | % Δ | P |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| MSSES function (N = 13) | 56.24 (22.36) | 53.65 (25.55) | −5.34 (5.34) | 0.438 |
| MSSES control (N = 13) | 47.80 (15.00) | 52.78 (20.01) | +7.96 (8.15) | 0.297 |
| IPA limitations (N = 14) | 2.76 (0.68) | 2.72 (0.66) | −0.30 (6.45) | 0.720 |
| IPA problems (N = 14) | 1.90 (0.34) | 1.84 (0.46) | −1.58 (6.48) | 0.631 |
| MSQoL-54 physical (N = 5) | 38.12 (6.46) | 45.54 (18.12) | +4.18 (13.05) | 0.719 |
| MSQoL-54 mental (N = 10) | 53.83 (17.32) | 57.03 (14.29) | +8.06 (9.51) | 0.649 |
| HADS anxiety (N = 13) | 7.21 (3.38) | 6.31 (4.55) | −6.99 (12.78) | 0.477 |
| HADS depression (N = 14) | 6.71 (3.89) | 6.50 (3.78) | +25.59 (25.11) | 0.843 |
| MFIS-5 (N = 14) | 12.57 (4.03) | 11.93 (3.36) | −1.00 (6.60) | 0.395 |