Literature DB >> 6725502

Coping with chronic illness: strategy preferences, changes in preferences and associated emotional reactions.

L L Viney, M T Westbrook.   

Abstract

Coping strategy preferences, changes in those preferences and their associations with different patterns of psychological reaction were investigated in three studies of chronically ill patients. A simple self-appraisal device, consisting of the ranking of six clusters of strategies, was used to assess patients' coping preferences. In Study 1 patients were found to prefer optimism, and probably fatalism , more than non-patients, while non-patients preferred action strategies and, to some extent, interpersonal coping. In Study 2 coronary patients were bound to prefer more optimism strategies but fewer escape strategies than other chronically ill patients. All patients also changed some of their coping preferences over time, preferring optimism in hospital and fatalism at home. Study 3 showed preferences for action strategies to be associated with desirable psychological reaction patterns such as relatively little uncertainty and helplessness. Preferences for escape strategies were linked with patterns which may be less desirable, such as much anxiety and indirectly expressed anger. Optimism and fatalism , although preferred by many patients, were associated with patterns of psychological reaction in which desirable and undesirable elements were mixed. Preferences for control strategies proved to be linked with reactions of patients when in hospital only, while those for interpersonal coping proved to be reaction-linked only when patients were at home.

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Year:  1984        PMID: 6725502     DOI: 10.1016/0021-9681(84)90032-8

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Chronic Dis        ISSN: 0021-9681


  7 in total

1.  Adapting the Jalowiec Coping Scale in Norwegian adult psoriasis patients.

Authors:  A Wahl; T Moum; B R Hanestad; I Wiklund; M H Kalfoss
Journal:  Qual Life Res       Date:  1999-08       Impact factor: 4.147

2.  The relationship of uncertainty, control, commitment, and threat of recurrence to coping strategies used by women diagnosed with breast cancer.

Authors:  B A Hilton
Journal:  J Behav Med       Date:  1989-02

3.  Drug-related problems in patients with angina pectoris, type 2 diabetes and asthma--interviewing patients at home.

Authors:  Lotte Stig Haugbølle; Ellen Westh Sørensen
Journal:  Pharm World Sci       Date:  2006-10-26

4.  Coping and quality of life in patients with psoriasis.

Authors:  A Wahl; B R Hanestad; I Wiklund; T Moum
Journal:  Qual Life Res       Date:  1999-08       Impact factor: 4.147

5.  Spirituality, Illness Unpredictability, and Math Anxiety Effects on Negative Affect and Affect-Management Coping for Individuals Diagnosed with Alpha-1 Antitrypsin Deficiency.

Authors:  Amber K Worthington; Roxanne L Parrott; Rachel A Smith
Journal:  Health Commun       Date:  2017-01-06

6.  Basing pharmacy counselling on the perspective of the angina pectoris patient.

Authors:  Lotte Stig Haugbølle; Ellen Westh Sørensen; Birgitte Gundersen; Kirsten Holme Petersen; Lene Lorentzen
Journal:  Pharm World Sci       Date:  2002-04

7.  Cancer information seeking among African Americans.

Authors:  Vetta L Sanders Thompson; Patricia Cavazos-Rehg; Kimberly Y Tate; Amy Gaier
Journal:  J Cancer Educ       Date:  2008       Impact factor: 1.771

  7 in total

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