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Predictors of support provision: A study with couples adapting to incontinence following radical prostatectomy
Author(s) -
Knoll Nina,
Burkert Silke,
Luszczynska Aleksandra,
Roigas Jan,
Gralla Oliver
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
british journal of health psychology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.05
H-Index - 88
eISSN - 2044-8287
pISSN - 1359-107X
DOI - 10.1348/135910710x522860
Subject(s) - generalizability theory , affect (linguistics) , social support , psychology , context (archaeology) , clinical psychology , explained variation , developmental psychology , social psychology , communication , biology , machine learning , computer science , paleontology
Objectives.   Four domains of predictors of support provision were tested in couples facing an illness‐related stress context. Predictor domains of partners' support provision to patients adapting to incontinence following prostatectomy included stress factors, recipient factors, provider factors, and relationship factors. Methods.   Data from 109 patients and their female partners were analysed. Couples provided data on five measurement occasions from 2 weeks to 1 year postsurgery. Predictors included patient's incontinence (stress factor), patient's support mobilization, affect and general self‐efficacy (recipient factors), partner's affect and general self‐efficacy (provider factors), partners' average waking time spent together, both partners' relationship satisfaction and partner's received support from patient (as an indicator of reciprocal support; relationship factors). Results.   Provider factors were not reliably associated with support provision, neither was patient negative affect. Stress and relationship factors accounted for outcome variance in the expected directions. Among recipient factors, mobilization of support and patient self‐efficacy were positively related with the outcome, whereas patient positive affect was negatively associated with support provision by partners. Conclusions.   Findings on predictor domains are in line with other couple studies that used non‐illness‐related stress contexts. Resemblance of findings points to generalizability of predictions across stress contexts varying in content, controllability, and duration.

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