Publication | Closed Access
Illness Acceptance, Hospitalization Stress and Subjective Health in a Sample of Chronic Patients Admitted to Hospital
52
Citations
23
References
2009
Year
Quality Of LifeMental HealthHospital MedicinePatient ExperienceHealth Services ResearchComorbidityHealth SciencesPsychiatryPsychosocial FactorIllness AcceptanceNursingHospitalizationHealth BehaviorPatient-centered OutcomeBehavioral HealthMedicinePatient SatisfactionHospitalization StressSubjective Health
The aim of this study was to examine the effects of illness acceptance on the subjective health of hospitalized chronic medical patients. Participants were 128 patients with a previous diagnosis of chronic coronary artery disease, cancer, or chronic renal disease, who were admitted to a public hospital. Illness acceptance was associated with higher levels of subjective health. It was negatively related to psychological symptoms and positively to self-rated health, even after controlling for demographic variables, type of disease, years since diagnosis, health-related quality of life and hospitalization stress. Furthermore, acceptance mediated the effects of hospitalization stress on subjective health measures.
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