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Separating emotions from consequences in muscle disease: comparing beneficial and unhelpful illness schemata to inform intervention development

Separating emotions from consequences in muscle disease: comparing beneficial and unhelpful illness schemata to inform intervention development
Separating emotions from consequences in muscle disease: comparing beneficial and unhelpful illness schemata to inform intervention development
OBJECTIVE:
Muscle diseases are currently untreatable and people with muscle disease experience reduced quality of life (QoL) and low mood. Patient's illness perceptions explain large proportions of the variance in QoL and mood, even after considering the impact of disease severity. Therefore a psychological intervention which helps patients modify their illness perceptions may improve QoL and mood even as the disease progresses. However, it is unknown which profile of illness perceptions (illness schema) an intervention should seek to promote. We aimed to fully describe and compare the illness schemata of clusters associated with better and worse outcomes.

METHOD:
Following a cluster analysis of 217 people with muscle disease, a between-cluster comparison of QoL and mood identified the clusters associated with better and worse outcomes. Functional impairment was compared between-clusters to indicate if this could account for observed differences. Inter-correlations between the illness perceptions held within each cluster were examined across the clusters.

RESULTS:
Three stable clusters holding distinct illness schemata emerged. One cluster was characterised by greater functional impairment, worse QoL and mood than the other two clusters. The other two clusters did not differ in functional impairment but differed significantly in QoL and mood. The cluster associated with better outcomes was characterised by realistic views of timeline, greater coherence, reduced emotional representation and identity, and a lack of association between emotional representation and consequences.

CONCLUSION:
Detailed comparison of beneficial and unhelpful illness schemata, taking into account disease-specific concerns, can help inform both the content and composition of an intervention.
cluster analysis, illness perceptions, muscle disease, neuromuscular, psychological intervention, quality of life
0022-3999
320-326
Graham, Christopher
6c3d5290-8f90-4db0-9b9b-e229f3c6b1c1
Rose, Michael
6586276a-b03f-4c98-be24-b58c529da840
Hankins, Matthew
ce4b7d68-3320-4af4-9dd7-3537a4b07219
Chalder, Trudie
cb09653b-2c1e-4dfc-bb13-c6e8ca918602
Weinman, John
d84c2633-696c-4731-b372-92a8d552276c
Graham, Christopher
6c3d5290-8f90-4db0-9b9b-e229f3c6b1c1
Rose, Michael
6586276a-b03f-4c98-be24-b58c529da840
Hankins, Matthew
ce4b7d68-3320-4af4-9dd7-3537a4b07219
Chalder, Trudie
cb09653b-2c1e-4dfc-bb13-c6e8ca918602
Weinman, John
d84c2633-696c-4731-b372-92a8d552276c

Graham, Christopher, Rose, Michael, Hankins, Matthew, Chalder, Trudie and Weinman, John (2013) Separating emotions from consequences in muscle disease: comparing beneficial and unhelpful illness schemata to inform intervention development. Journal of Psychosomatic Research, 74 (4), 320-326. (doi:10.1016/j.jpsychores.2012.09.012). (PMID:23497834)

Record type: Article

Abstract

OBJECTIVE:
Muscle diseases are currently untreatable and people with muscle disease experience reduced quality of life (QoL) and low mood. Patient's illness perceptions explain large proportions of the variance in QoL and mood, even after considering the impact of disease severity. Therefore a psychological intervention which helps patients modify their illness perceptions may improve QoL and mood even as the disease progresses. However, it is unknown which profile of illness perceptions (illness schema) an intervention should seek to promote. We aimed to fully describe and compare the illness schemata of clusters associated with better and worse outcomes.

METHOD:
Following a cluster analysis of 217 people with muscle disease, a between-cluster comparison of QoL and mood identified the clusters associated with better and worse outcomes. Functional impairment was compared between-clusters to indicate if this could account for observed differences. Inter-correlations between the illness perceptions held within each cluster were examined across the clusters.

RESULTS:
Three stable clusters holding distinct illness schemata emerged. One cluster was characterised by greater functional impairment, worse QoL and mood than the other two clusters. The other two clusters did not differ in functional impairment but differed significantly in QoL and mood. The cluster associated with better outcomes was characterised by realistic views of timeline, greater coherence, reduced emotional representation and identity, and a lack of association between emotional representation and consequences.

CONCLUSION:
Detailed comparison of beneficial and unhelpful illness schemata, taking into account disease-specific concerns, can help inform both the content and composition of an intervention.

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More information

e-pub ahead of print date: 9 October 2012
Published date: April 2013
Keywords: cluster analysis, illness perceptions, muscle disease, neuromuscular, psychological intervention, quality of life
Organisations: Faculty of Health Sciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 358486
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/358486
ISSN: 0022-3999
PURE UUID: edf240c3-8fd7-42d3-a03d-d7e76747ce12

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Date deposited: 09 Oct 2013 11:44
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 15:04

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Contributors

Author: Christopher Graham
Author: Michael Rose
Author: Matthew Hankins
Author: Trudie Chalder
Author: John Weinman

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