Self-Efficacy, Patient Activation, and the Burden of Inflammatory Bowel Disease on Patients' Daily Lives.

Dig Dis Sci

Department of Internal Medicine, Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Michigan Medicine, Ann Arbor, MI, USA.

Published: November 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examines how patient activation and self-efficacy impact the daily lives of individuals with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD).
  • Researchers surveyed 132 IBD patients using various assessment tools and found that both higher patient activation and self-efficacy correlate with a lower burden of IBD.
  • The results suggest that self-efficacy plays a significant role in mediating the relationship between patient activation and the effects of IBD on patients' daily lives.

Article Abstract

Background: The effective management of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) requires complex self-management behaviors. Both patient activation (the degree to which patients are willing and able to engage in care) and self-efficacy (one's confidence in performing certain behaviors) are thought to play an important role in chronic disease self-management, but patient activation is a broad concept that can be more difficult to precisely target than self-efficacy. We aimed to describe the relationship between patient activation, self-efficacy, and the burden of IBD on patients' daily lives.

Methods: Patients with IBD were recruited from a single center to complete a survey including the Patient Activation Measure (PAM-13®), the IBD Self-Efficacy Scale (IBD-SES), and an IBD-specific patient-reported outcome measure. Using multivariable linear regression, we examined the relationship between IBD burden, self-efficacy, and patient activation, adjusting a priori for age, gender, IBD type, IBD medications, active corticosteroid use, anxiety, and depression. We performed a post-hoc mediation analysis to examine self-efficacy as a potential mediator in the relationship between patient activation and the burden of IBD on patient's daily lives.

Results: A total of 132 patients with IBD completed the survey (59% Crohn's disease, 41% ulcerative colitis, 52% female). Higher levels of patient activation and higher levels of self-efficacy were each associated with lower IBD burden (patient activation: ß = - 1.9, p < 0.001, self-efficacy: ß = - 2.6, p < 0.001). Post hoc mediation analysis confirmed that the relationship between patient activation and daily IBD burden was mediated by self-efficacy (Average Causal Mediation Effect = - 1.00, p < 0.001, proportion mediated = 0.62, p < 0.001).

Discussion: The relationship between patient activation and IBD burden is highly mediated by self-efficacy, suggesting that self-efficacy could be a more precise target for intervention. Future studies could focus on targeting self-efficacy to build individuals' confidence in IBD self-management and testing of IBD-tailored self-management programs to ultimately improve disease outcomes.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11744776PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10620-024-08712-2DOI Listing

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