The relationship of self-efficacy with depression, pain, and health status in the arthritis self-management program
Over the past decade results from a series of research studies have contributed to the development and evaluation of the Arthritis Self-Management Program (ASMP), a volunteer-led patient education program for persons with arthritis. To date, these studies have primarily focussed on program effect...
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ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-61122018-01-05T17:32:58Z The relationship of self-efficacy with depression, pain, and health status in the arthritis self-management program McGowan, Patrick Thomas Arthritis -- Patients -- Rehabilitation Self-help techniques Over the past decade results from a series of research studies have contributed to the development and evaluation of the Arthritis Self-Management Program (ASMP), a volunteer-led patient education program for persons with arthritis. To date, these studies have primarily focussed on program effectiveness, process, implementation, and dissemination. In these studies self-efficacy was identified as an important construct contributing to the program's effectiveness, however, the exact relationship between self-efficacy and health outcomes has not been determined. In this dissertation research I investigate the evidence of a causal relationship between self-efficacy and three program outcomes (a decrease in depression, less pain, and a higher self-rating of overall health status), and attempt to determine the nature of that relationship. The research methodology involved the use of structural equation modeling (SEM) with two longitudinal samples, one (n=122) of 1991 ASMP participants in British Columbia, the other (n=189) of 1992 ASMP participants in Ontario. In the analysis self-efficacy was paired separately with depression, pain and perceived health status. The results of the SEM failed to confirm a dominant causal relationship from self-efficacy to depression, or to pain. This may indicate that these variables have a reciprocal or "spiral" relationship or that both sets of variables may be caused by factors not considered in the analysis. The results of the SEM between self-efficacy and perceived health status did, however, show that higher self-rated health status leads to higher self-efficacy at a later time. The data did not show statistical significance for other causal patterns among these variables. The findings suggest that self-efficacy may play a moderator role in the complex relationship involving individuals with arthritis, their behaviors, and health outcomes. As well, the findings have implications for health promotion planning and research in that they reinforce the complex interplay of psychological and behavioral variables (probably influenced by social variables) in programs which attempt to give individuals greater control over their health. The efficacy and effectiveness of the ASMP has been established in previous studies. This study in no way calls these into question. It does, however, suggest that the mechanism by which these effective outcomes are achieved warrants further investigation. Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies Graduate 2009-03-16T23:44:33Z 2009-03-16T23:44:33Z 1996 1996-11 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/6112 eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use. 11009430 bytes application/pdf |
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Arthritis -- Patients -- Rehabilitation Self-help techniques McGowan, Patrick Thomas The relationship of self-efficacy with depression, pain, and health status in the arthritis self-management program |
description |
Over the past decade results from a series of research studies have contributed to the
development and evaluation of the Arthritis Self-Management Program (ASMP), a volunteer-led
patient education program for persons with arthritis. To date, these studies have primarily
focussed on program effectiveness, process, implementation, and dissemination. In these studies
self-efficacy was identified as an important construct contributing to the program's effectiveness,
however, the exact relationship between self-efficacy and health outcomes has not been
determined. In this dissertation research I investigate the evidence of a causal relationship
between self-efficacy and three program outcomes (a decrease in depression, less pain, and a
higher self-rating of overall health status), and attempt to determine the nature of that
relationship.
The research methodology involved the use of structural equation modeling (SEM) with
two longitudinal samples, one (n=122) of 1991 ASMP participants in British Columbia, the other
(n=189) of 1992 ASMP participants in Ontario. In the analysis self-efficacy was paired
separately with depression, pain and perceived health status.
The results of the SEM failed to confirm a dominant causal relationship from self-efficacy
to depression, or to pain. This may indicate that these variables have a reciprocal or
"spiral" relationship or that both sets of variables may be caused by factors not considered in the analysis. The results of the SEM between self-efficacy and perceived health status did, however,
show that higher self-rated health status leads to higher self-efficacy at a later time. The data did
not show statistical significance for other causal patterns among these variables.
The findings suggest that self-efficacy may play a moderator role in the complex
relationship involving individuals with arthritis, their behaviors, and health outcomes. As well,
the findings have implications for health promotion planning and research in that they reinforce
the complex interplay of psychological and behavioral variables (probably influenced by social
variables) in programs which attempt to give individuals greater control over their health. The
efficacy and effectiveness of the ASMP has been established in previous studies. This study in no
way calls these into question. It does, however, suggest that the mechanism by which these
effective outcomes are achieved warrants further investigation. === Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies === Graduate |
author |
McGowan, Patrick Thomas |
author_facet |
McGowan, Patrick Thomas |
author_sort |
McGowan, Patrick Thomas |
title |
The relationship of self-efficacy with depression, pain, and health status in the arthritis self-management program |
title_short |
The relationship of self-efficacy with depression, pain, and health status in the arthritis self-management program |
title_full |
The relationship of self-efficacy with depression, pain, and health status in the arthritis self-management program |
title_fullStr |
The relationship of self-efficacy with depression, pain, and health status in the arthritis self-management program |
title_full_unstemmed |
The relationship of self-efficacy with depression, pain, and health status in the arthritis self-management program |
title_sort |
relationship of self-efficacy with depression, pain, and health status in the arthritis self-management program |
publishDate |
2009 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/2429/6112 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT mcgowanpatrickthomas therelationshipofselfefficacywithdepressionpainandhealthstatusinthearthritisselfmanagementprogram AT mcgowanpatrickthomas relationshipofselfefficacywithdepressionpainandhealthstatusinthearthritisselfmanagementprogram |
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