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Coping with asthma : investigation and intervention using the self-regulation model

The Self-Regulation Model (Leventhal, Nerenz & Steele, 1984) highlights the roles of patients' illness representations, coping, emotional reactions and appraisal of coping in the progression of chronic disease. This thesis incorporates previous literature on adherence, panic-fear and selfmanagement interventions into the model in order to (a) investigate coping with asthma and (b) develop an intervention aimed at improving asthmatic control. New measures of asthmatic control and illness representations of the consequences of having asthma were developed in order to operationalise the model. A cross-sectional study investigated factors influencing asthmatic control in a sample of 35 adult asthma sufferers recruited through a single general practice. Coping was poor, adherence being low and less than 50% of participants reporting current Peak Flow monitoring or medical contact during the previous 12 months. Good coping appeared to be a response to poor asthmatic control, rather than prophylactic. Good asthmatic control was associated with low perceived consequences, recent medical contact, moderate panic-fear and low general avoidance coping. These results imply that asthmatic control may be improved by encouraging sufferers to maintain regular contact with outpatient services and to implement prophylactic coping. Since epidemiological and clinical evidence suggested asthmatic control to be poor in young adults, an intervention was developed to improve asthmatic control in this group by modifying illness representations, coping and panic-fear. The intervention was evaluated in a randomised controlled study of 50 student asthma sufferers identified initially through an epidemiological screening of 2,979 students. It led to increased Preventer medication use and Peak Flow monitoring and decreased distress over the condition. However, the coping process changed and asthmatic control improved even in the control group, perhaps because self-monitoring of asthmatic control for the study constituted a change in coping. This unanticipated result was entirely compatible with the Self-Regulation Model. The thesis dearly demonstrates value of the Self-Regulation Model in understanding asthma self-management and developing clinical interventions.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:bl.uk/oai:ethos.bl.uk:548180
Date January 1995
CreatorsWilliams, Julie M.
ContributorsJohnston, Marie
PublisherUniversity of St Andrews
Source SetsEthos UK
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeElectronic Thesis or Dissertation
Sourcehttp://hdl.handle.net/10023/2800

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