Longitudinal assessment of the common sense model before and during the COVID-19 pandemic: A large coeliac disease cohort study

Psychosocial factors likely play a substantial role in the well-being of those living with coeliac disease, especially during the COVID-19 pandemic, however, little research has examined well-being in this cohort using an integrated socio-cognitive model. This study had two aims: (1) Examine changes...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of psychosomatic research 2022-02, Vol.153, p.110711-110711, Article 110711
Hauptverfasser: Möller, Stephan P., Apputhurai, Pragalathan, Tye-Din, Jason A., Knowles, Simon R.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Psychosocial factors likely play a substantial role in the well-being of those living with coeliac disease, especially during the COVID-19 pandemic, however, little research has examined well-being in this cohort using an integrated socio-cognitive model. This study had two aims: (1) Examine changes in gastrointestinal symptoms, psychosocial factors, and well-being outcomes (i.e., psychological distress, quality of life [QoL]) associated with the pandemic, (2) Examine the interrelationship of these variables across timepoints using the Common Sense Model (CSM). 1697 adults with coeliac disease (Time 1, pre-pandemic; 83.1% female, mean age = 55.8, SD = 15.0 years) and 674 follow-up participants (Time 2, pandemic; 82.8% female, mean age = 57.0, SD = 14.4 years) completed an online questionnaire. Hypotheses were tested using repeated measures MANOVA and cross-lagged panel model analyses. Participants reported improved QoL, and reduced gastrointestinal symptoms, negative illness perceptions and maladaptive coping from pre-pandemic to during the pandemic. There was no significant change in pain catastrophising or psychological distress. Cross-lagged effects showed gastrointestinal symptoms to predict negative illness perceptions, which in turn were predictive of poorer outcomes across all variables except pain catastrophising. Consistent with the CSM, there was a reciprocal relationship between illness perceptions and QoL over time. Maladaptive coping and pain catastrophising demonstrated limited predictive utility. The COVID-19 pandemic appears to have had a small beneficial effect across several indices of well-being among adults with coeliac disease. Cross-lagged relationships highlight illness perceptions as a predictor of well-being outcomes and a potential target for psychosocial interventions. •The COVID-19 pandemic was associated with improvement in quality of life.•First cross-lagged panel analysis of the Common Sense Model (CSM)•Illness perceptions were predictive of several well-being outcomes across time.•Illness perceptions were reciprocally related to quality of life across time.
ISSN:0022-3999
1879-1360
DOI:10.1016/j.jpsychores.2021.110711