在COVID-19大流行中,与疾病相关的伴侣沟通可预测更好的健康、COVID和社会环境结果:对患有隐性慢性疾病学生的纵向研究

M. Shrout, Emily M. Buehler, Daeun G. Lee, Megan E. Renna
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在这项针对患有隐匿性慢性疾病(CCHC)的学生的纵向研究中,我们运用了人际关系披露过程模型的组成部分,以探讨在 COVID-19 大流行期间,疾病披露和感知到的伴侣响应度如何带来健康和社会效益。患有慢性阻塞性肺病和有恋爱关系的学生在 COVID-19 大流行期间返回校园的学年初、学年中和学年末完成了在线调查(nTime1 = 101,nTime2 = 52,nTime3 = 54)。混合模型显示,疾病公开程度越高、感知到伙伴响应能力越强的学生,身体健康状况越好,从事损害健康的行为越少,对 COVID-19 大流行的担忧和压力越小,与疾病相关的耻辱感、歧视和社会孤立感越低。随着时间的推移,学生对疾病的自我披露越多,其健康损害行为和与疾病相关的歧视就越少。值得注意的是,感知到的伴侣响应度将更多的疾病自我披露与更好的健康、COVID 相关和社会环境结果联系在一起。这些研究结果表明,在 COVID-19 大流行的情况下,与伴侣公开谈论可隐瞒的疾病,进而感受到关心、认可和理解,对健康和社会都有益处。这项研究为那些健康风险较高的人群获得更好的社会和健康结果的关系途径提供了新的证据。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Illness-related partner communication predicts better health, COVID, and social-contextual outcomes amid the COVID-19 pandemic: A longitudinal study of students with concealable chronic health conditions
In this longitudinal study of students with concealable chronic health conditions (CCHCs), we applied components of interpersonal disclosure process models to investigate how illness disclosures and perceived partner responsiveness conferred health and social benefits during the COVID-19 pandemic. Students with CCHCs and in relationships completed online surveys at the beginning, middle, and end of the academic year in which they returned to campus amid the COVID-19 pandemic ( nTime1 = 101, nTime2 = 52, nTime3 = 54). Mixed models showed students with greater illness disclosures and perceived partner responsiveness had better physical health, engaged in less health-compromising behaviors, felt less worried and stressed about the COVID-19 pandemic, and experienced lower illness-related stigma, discrimination, and social isolation. Over time, students’ greater illness self-disclosures predicted lower health-compromising behaviors and illness-related discrimination. Notably, perceived partner responsiveness connected greater illness self-disclosures to better health, COVID-related, and social-contextual outcomes. These findings demonstrate the health and social benefits of talking openly about concealable illnesses with partners and, in turn, feeling cared for, validated, and understood amid the COVID-19 pandemic. This study provides new evidence on relational pathways to better social and health outcomes among those with heightened health risks.
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