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Coping with chronic illness: A study of illness controllability and the influence of coping strategies on psychological adjustment.
Authors:Felton  Barbara J; Revenson  Tracey A
Abstract:Longitudinal data on the coping strategies used by 151 41–89 yr old middle-aged and older adults faced with 1 of 4 chronic illnesses were used to evaluate the role of coping in the explanation of psychological adjustment. The authors distinguished between illnesses that offer few opportunities for control (rheumatoid arthritis and cancer) and those more responsive to individual and medical efforts at control (hypertension and diabetes) and evaluated the emotional consequences of 2 coping strategies—information seeking and wish-fulfilling fantasy—expected to play different roles in adjustment. Results show that information seeking had salubrious effects on adjustment and that wish-fulfilling fantasy had deleterious consequences; contrary to expectation, neither strategy's effects were modified by illness controllability. Analyses of the direction of causation between coping and adjustment suggest that wish-fulfilling fantasy is linked to poor adjustment in a mutually reinforcing causal cycle. The modesty of the effects of coping, however, demands replication of results to confirm the conclusions drawn in the present study. (36 ref) (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)
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