Relationship and sexual satisfaction are associated with better disease self-management in persons with epilepsy

•For people with epilepsy (PWEs), intimate relationships are a common concern.•Many PWEs have difficulties navigating and maintaining relationships.•Good quality relationships are linked with better health outcomes and practices.•PWEs in more satisfying relationships reported better self-management...

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Veröffentlicht in:Epilepsy & behavior 2021-06, Vol.119, p.107937-107937, Article 107937
Hauptverfasser: Gesselman, Amanda N., Wion, Rachel K., Garcia, Justin R., Miller, Wendy R.
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creator Gesselman, Amanda N.
Wion, Rachel K.
Garcia, Justin R.
Miller, Wendy R.
description •For people with epilepsy (PWEs), intimate relationships are a common concern.•Many PWEs have difficulties navigating and maintaining relationships.•Good quality relationships are linked with better health outcomes and practices.•PWEs in more satisfying relationships reported better self-management abilities.•Relationship factors should be considered in future epilepsy health promotion work. Prior research has demonstrated that PWEs view intimate interpersonal relationships as personally important and as a substantive challenge in their lives. This is significant as high-quality intimate relationships have been linked with greater well-being and better healthcare self-management in other disease contexts. For persons with epilepsy (PWEs), self-management is critical for seizure control, lower mortality, and better quality of life. In the current study, we conducted the first known investigation into the quality of PWEs’ intimate relationships and their self-management abilities. In a sample of 88 PWEs, using the Adult Epilepsy Self-Management Instrument, results demonstrate links between greater relationship satisfaction and sexual satisfaction with better self-management on seven of the eleven subscales: health communication, coping skills, social support, seizure tracking, seizure response, stress management, and wellness; satisfaction was unrelated to the treatment, safety, medical adherence, and proactivity subscales. Importantly, these results held while controlling for age, gender, social support, and presence of comorbidities. These findings provide some evidence of the importance of intimate relationships in understanding PWEs’ healthcare management abilities. Given that intimate relationship dynamics have been shown to be highly amenable to intervention, this is an area of potential interest for improving self-management in PWEs.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.yebeh.2021.107937
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Prior research has demonstrated that PWEs view intimate interpersonal relationships as personally important and as a substantive challenge in their lives. This is significant as high-quality intimate relationships have been linked with greater well-being and better healthcare self-management in other disease contexts. For persons with epilepsy (PWEs), self-management is critical for seizure control, lower mortality, and better quality of life. In the current study, we conducted the first known investigation into the quality of PWEs’ intimate relationships and their self-management abilities. In a sample of 88 PWEs, using the Adult Epilepsy Self-Management Instrument, results demonstrate links between greater relationship satisfaction and sexual satisfaction with better self-management on seven of the eleven subscales: health communication, coping skills, social support, seizure tracking, seizure response, stress management, and wellness; satisfaction was unrelated to the treatment, safety, medical adherence, and proactivity subscales. Importantly, these results held while controlling for age, gender, social support, and presence of comorbidities. These findings provide some evidence of the importance of intimate relationships in understanding PWEs’ healthcare management abilities. 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Prior research has demonstrated that PWEs view intimate interpersonal relationships as personally important and as a substantive challenge in their lives. This is significant as high-quality intimate relationships have been linked with greater well-being and better healthcare self-management in other disease contexts. For persons with epilepsy (PWEs), self-management is critical for seizure control, lower mortality, and better quality of life. In the current study, we conducted the first known investigation into the quality of PWEs’ intimate relationships and their self-management abilities. In a sample of 88 PWEs, using the Adult Epilepsy Self-Management Instrument, results demonstrate links between greater relationship satisfaction and sexual satisfaction with better self-management on seven of the eleven subscales: health communication, coping skills, social support, seizure tracking, seizure response, stress management, and wellness; satisfaction was unrelated to the treatment, safety, medical adherence, and proactivity subscales. Importantly, these results held while controlling for age, gender, social support, and presence of comorbidities. These findings provide some evidence of the importance of intimate relationships in understanding PWEs’ healthcare management abilities. 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subjects Adult
Epilepsy
Epilepsy management
Health promotion
Humans
Interpersonal relationships
Intimate relationships
Orgasm
Personal Satisfaction
Quality of Life
Relationship satisfaction
Seizures
Self-Management
Sexual satisfaction
title Relationship and sexual satisfaction are associated with better disease self-management in persons with epilepsy
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