Exploring the Mechanism of the Clinical Encounter on Depressive Symptoms in Young Adults: A Path Analysis.

Issues Ment Health Nurs

b Chief Psychiatric Consultant Johns Hopkins Multiple Sclerosis & Transverse Myelitis Centers of Excellence; School of Medicine, Johns Hopkins Hospital , Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore , Maryland , USA.

Published: July 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • This study investigates how high-quality clinical encounters can help reduce depressive symptoms in young adults through effective communication between patients and providers.
  • Using Street's Model of Health Communication, the research examines the relationships between communication skills, patient activation, and depressive symptoms among 60 young adults.
  • Results show that better communication and self-appraisal lead to higher patient activation, which in turn significantly reduces depressive symptoms, suggesting new intervention targets for improving mental health in clinical settings.

Article Abstract

Elucidating mechanisms of how high quality clinical encounters with providers may alleviate depressive symptoms in young adults are critical to reduce psychological morbidity and disability. Guided by Street's Model of Health Communication (SMHC), this study explores the predictive relationships of the clinical encounter, which includes communication functions (patient-provider communication and patient self-appraisal of communication skills with provider) and proximal outcomes (patient activation; PA) to improve health outcomes (depressive symptoms) in young adults. This study of young adults (n = 60) employed path analysis to examine the overall model fit and direct and indirect effects of each variable on depressive symptoms. The final SMHC had excellent model fit (X = 2.26, p =.32, TLI =.99, CFI = 1.00, RMSEA =.05). Patient-provider communication and self-appraised communication skills with providers had indirect effects on depressive symptoms and a direct effect on PA; PA had a direct effect on depressive symptoms (R =.30, p <.01). Findings elucidate potential novel targets, amenable to behavioral intervention, to improve depressive symptoms within the clinical encounter, and provide a foundation for hypothesis-driven model testing among young adults with depressive symptoms.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01612840.2017.1305023DOI Listing

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