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Exploring the Impact of Covid-19-Related Perceptions on Psychological Distress and Quality of Life in an International Gastrointestinal Cohort Over Time Guided by the Common Sense Model

journal contribution
posted on 2023-02-15, 03:56 authored by SR Knowles, SP Möller, A Stengel, Antonina Mikocka-WalusAntonina Mikocka-Walus, N Ferreira, IA Trindade, A Mokrowiecka, J Burisch, M Barreiro-de Acosta, CN Bernstein, B Lo, David SkvarcDavid Skvarc
The aim of this longitudinal study was to examine changes in COVID-19 and illness-related perceptions, gastrointestinal symptoms, coping, catastrophising, psychological distress, and QoL during the COVID-19 pandemic. A total of 831 adults with a gastrointestinal condition completed an online questionnaire at baseline (May—October 2020). Of those, 270 (32.5%) participants (85.2% female, mean age = 47.3 years) provided follow-up data (March—May 2021). Repeated-measures multiple analysis of variance and a cross-lagged panel model were used to test the study hypotheses. Gastrointestinal symptoms and COVID-19 perceptions at follow-up were strongly predicted by their baseline values, while illness perceptions were predicted by baseline gastrointestinal symptoms. Cross-lagged relationships indicated a reciprocal relationship between gastrointestinal symptoms and psychological distress. Moreover, gastrointestinal symptoms had substantial predictive utility, strongly predicting future gastrointestinal symptoms, and to a lesser extent, more negative illness perceptions, greater psychological distress, and greater use of adaptive coping strategies across time.

History

Journal

Journal of Clinical Psychology in Medical Settings

Pagination

1-17

Location

United States

ISSN

1068-9583

eISSN

1573-3572

Language

en

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC