Frontiers in Psychology (Aug 2024)

Life history strategy and romantic satisfaction in patients’ behavior

  • Cristina Ene,
  • Vlad Burtaverde,
  • Peter Karl Jonason,
  • Peter Karl Jonason,
  • Felix Brehar,
  • Viorel Pruna

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1346597
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15

Abstract

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According to evolutionary psychologists, an individual—consciously or not—who allocates resources for somatic effort focuses on homeostasis and the protection of themselves and others. During health crises, patients must choose between mobilizing their remaining resources to either recover or accepting the disease as inevitable. When patients choose to be proactive in terms of protecting their health, are conscientious, and compliant in the recovery process, a high level of patient activation is achieved. Therefore, we examined (N = 252) whether the patients’ K fitness strategies are predictors for engagement in patient activation-type behavior. In addition, we tested the mediating effect of pain catastrophizing and the moderating effect of romantic satisfaction. We found that people with a medical diagnosis, who were in a romantic relationship, and had high-K fitness were much more likely to be activated patients. Moreover, pain catastrophizing mediated the relationship between high-K fitness strategy and patient activation, while romantic satisfaction moderated this relationship, amplifying its intensity. The findings highlight the importance of identifying patients’ psychological resources (e.g., high-K strategy, romantic satisfaction, or pain perception) to keep them engaged in the health recovery process.

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