Close relationships and diabetes management across the lifespan: The good, the bad, and autonomy

Relationships are linked with positive and negative self-management and illness outcomes for individuals with type 1 diabetes. Explanations for these mixed associations have remained separated in psychosocial research in type 1 diabetes by relationship type (e.g. parent vs spouse) and individual’s a...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of health psychology 2021-02, Vol.26 (2), p.226-237
Hauptverfasser: Kelly, Caitlin S, Berg, Cynthia A
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description Relationships are linked with positive and negative self-management and illness outcomes for individuals with type 1 diabetes. Explanations for these mixed associations have remained separated in psychosocial research in type 1 diabetes by relationship type (e.g. parent vs spouse) and individual’s age (e.g. adolescence vs older adulthood). In this conceptual review, we present a novel perspective that close relationships across the lifespan may be beneficial for illness self-management when they support individuals’ sense of autonomy, defined from a Basic Psychological Needs perspective. Processes of autonomy support are crucial for promoting illness management across all ages and relationship types.
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subjects Autonomy
Diabetes
Diabetics
Disease management
Illnesses
Psychological needs
Psychological processes
Psychosocial factors
Selfmanagement
Type 1 diabetes mellitus
title Close relationships and diabetes management across the lifespan: The good, the bad, and autonomy
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