Publication | Open Access
Anxiety and Depression Are Better Correlates of Parkinson’s Disease Quality of Life Than Apathy
48
Citations
31
References
2014
Year
Quality Of LifeMental HealthCaregiver QolPsychologySocial SciencesMood SymptomParkinson ’Life Than ApathyPsychiatryPsychiatric DiseaseDepressionRehabilitationPsychiatric DisorderParkinson DiseaseDisease QualityMood DisordersTrait AnxietyMedicineApathyPsychopathology
Due to controversy regarding the influence of apathy on quality of life (QoL), the authors examined the independent influence of apathy, depression, and trait anxiety in a nondemented sample of patients with Parkinson disease (PD). Participants (N=107) completed standard self-report measures of QoL and mood/motivation. Analyses investigated the contribution of these measures and empirically derived factor scores on QoL. QoL was predicted by trait anxiety, dysphoria, and decreased interest, with no independent contribution of apathy. Different patterns emerged with respect to domain-specific QoL, with trait anxiety being the strongest predictor across most domains. Anxiety was most widely related to QoL in PD, with minimal contribution of apathy. Future studies should examine different roles of PD mood/motivation symptoms on caregiver QoL.
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