Asian Nursing Research (Sep 2017)

Confrontation as a Mediator between Sense of Coherence and Self-management Behaviors among Elderly Patients with Coronary Heart Disease in North China

  • Zhenyun Li, RN,
  • Ting Liu, Ph.D., RN,
  • Jing Han, MMed, RN,
  • Ting Li, RN,
  • Qina Zhu, RN,
  • Aimin Wang, MMed, RN

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 3
pp. 201 – 206

Abstract

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Summary: Purpose: Self-management is critical to improve health outcomes of elderly patients with coronary heart disease (CHD). Sense of coherence (SOC) is found to be linked with self-management behaviors. However, their deeper relationship is not clear. The purposes of this study were to investigate the association between SOC and self-management behaviors among elderly CHD patients in China, and whether confrontation mediates this association. Methods: A cross-sectional design was used. A total of 275 elderly patients with CHD recruited from the cardiology department in a general hospital in North China were surveyed from October 2015 to April 2016. SOC, confrontation, and self-management behaviors were measured using the Chinese version of the SOC scale, subscale of Medical Coping Modes Questionnaire—Confrontation, and the CHD self-management scale, respectively. Correlation analysis and path analysis were conducted to analyze the data. Results: The mean (±standard deviation) scores of SOC, confrontation, and self-management behaviors were 62.20 (±9.61), 19.55 (±3.15), and 76.17 (±10.63), respectively. Correlation analysis showed that SOC, confrontation, and self-management behaviors were significantly correlated with each other. Path analysis indicated that SOC exerted a direct effect on self-management behaviors, whereas could affect self-management indirectly via confrontation. Bootstrap test result showed that confrontation played a mediating role (β = .20, p < .001) in the relationship between SOC and self-management behaviors. Conclusion: SOC was related to self-management behaviors, whereas confrontation mediated the effect of SOC on self-management behaviors. In practice, the role of confrontation coping should be valued when developing strategies to strengthen SOC and to improve self-management practice among elderly CHD patients. Keywords: aged, coping, coronary heart disease, self-care, sense of coherence