A longitudinal study on perceived health in cardiovascular patients: The role of conscientiousness, subjective wellbeing and cardiac self-efficacy

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Author
Tabernero Urbieta, Carmen
Gutiérrez Domingo, Tamara
Vecchione, Michele
Cuadrado, Esther
Castillo Mayén, Mª del Rosario
Rubio, Sebastián
Arenas, Alicia
Delgado-Lista, Javier
Jiménez-Pérez, Pablo
Luque Salas, Bárbara
Publisher
PLoSDate
2019Subject
Cardiovascular diseaseQuality of life
Conscientiousness
Subjective wellbeing
Self-efficacy beliefs
Psychosocial factors
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Show full item recordAbstract
Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is the world’s most prevalent chronic disease and the leading
chronic cause of morbidity. There are several psychosocial factors associated with quality of
life during CVD. Our main objectives were to analyze the roles of conscientiousness, subjective
wellbeing and self-efficacy beliefs. The sample comprised 514 patients (mean age
63.57 years) who were assessed twice over a nine-month interval. At Time 1, participants
answered a questionnaire assessing conscientiousness, perceived subjective wellbeing
(positive and negative affect, life satisfaction), cardiac self-efficacy and health-related quality
of life (HRQoL). The same variables (except for conscientiousness) were re-assessed at
Time 2. Results showed that conscientiousness had a positive relation with subjective wellbeing,
cardiac self-efficacy, and HRQoL at Time 1. Moreover, cardiac self-efficacy at Time 1
had a positive longitudinal effect on HRQoL at Time 2, while controlling for autoregressive
effects. Mediation analyses indicated that the relationship between conscientiousness and
HRQoL was mediated by positive affect and cardiac self-efficacy. These results suggest the
usefulness of psychosocial interventions aimed at promoting positive affect and self-efficacy
beliefs among CVD patients.
