AI Article Synopsis

  • This study aimed to investigate the relationships between social support, coping strategies, depression, anxiety, and cognitive function in individuals with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM).
  • Researchers conducted interviews with 496 hospitalized patients, utilizing various validated scales to evaluate social support, coping strategies, mental health, and cognitive abilities.
  • The results revealed that social support and coping strategies had meaningful indirect effects on cognitive function, primarily through their influence on depression and anxiety, highlighting the importance of these factors in managing T2DM.

Article Abstract

Objective: To explore the linear associations between social support, coping strategies, depression, anxiety, and cognitive function among people with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) using a path-analytic method.

Methods: This cross-sectional study enrolled 496 individuals hospitalized due to T2DM. Well-trained investigators conducted face-to-face interviews with the participants using the Social Support Rating Scale, the Chinese version of Medical Coping Modes Questionnaire, the Hospital Anxiety and Depression scale, and the Mini Mental State Examination to measure social support (including objective support, subjective support, and support utilization), coping strategies (including confrontation, avoidance, and acceptance-resignation), depression/anxiety, and cognitive function, respectively. A path analysis was used to elucidate the linear associations between social support, coping strategies, depression, anxiety, and cognitive function.

Results: In the final path model with satisfactory model fit, objective support was found to be associated with cognitive function not only directly but also indirectly through confrontation coping and depression, and acceptance-resignation coping and depression/anxiety. Further, subjective support was found to be associated with cognitive function indirectly through depression/anxiety, as well as serially through acceptance-resignation coping and depression/anxiety. Support utilization was found to be associated with cognitive function indirectly through confrontation coping and depression, as well as through acceptance-resignation coping and depression/anxiety.

Conclusion: Social support, coping strategies, depression, and anxiety were associated with cognitive function among people with T2DM, and these associations were best explained by a serial mediation model from social support, coping strategies, and depression and anxiety to cognitive function.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11421914PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.30773/pi.2024.0024DOI Listing

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