2009
DOI: 10.1080/13607860802459823
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Predictors of depressive symptoms in older veterans with heart failure

Abstract: Even if physical limitations, maladaptive coping and self-efficacy are held constant, decreasing perceptions of HF intrusiveness and locus of control to chance reduce depressive symptoms. These two cognitive/perceptual factors may play a salient role in treatment of depression among older HF patients.

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Cited by 62 publications
(72 citation statements)
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References 64 publications
(73 reference statements)
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“…Perhaps some of the loadings of turning to religion with maladaptive coping strategies at item-level analysis may also be the result of this effect: If participants in a sample do not endorse turning to religion or substance use, data from these sub-scales are highly skewed, as for example reported by Kallasmaa and Pulver [119] when using the COPE [10] questionnaire. In that case, when using a PCA with ordinal-level data, it could be possible that these two strategies load together [43] not because of their similarity in content, but simply because of their similarity in response level [37]. Given that religious affiliation is well known to be negatively correlated with use of drugs and alcohol [120], this might be a feasible alternative explanation rather than concluding that these two strategies are genuinely related.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Perhaps some of the loadings of turning to religion with maladaptive coping strategies at item-level analysis may also be the result of this effect: If participants in a sample do not endorse turning to religion or substance use, data from these sub-scales are highly skewed, as for example reported by Kallasmaa and Pulver [119] when using the COPE [10] questionnaire. In that case, when using a PCA with ordinal-level data, it could be possible that these two strategies load together [43] not because of their similarity in content, but simply because of their similarity in response level [37]. Given that religious affiliation is well known to be negatively correlated with use of drugs and alcohol [120], this might be a feasible alternative explanation rather than concluding that these two strategies are genuinely related.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This concerned the studies by Brain et al [19] As shown in Table 1, only one study reported that the turning to religion items did not fit onto the proposed factor structure [22]. Five studies [16,[40][41][42][43] reported that items from the religious coping sub-scale loaded together with items from other sub-scales. For four of these studies, both turning to religion items loaded onto the same factor, whereas in Zelikovsky et al [16] only one item loaded with another factor, while the other item was excluded due to a factor loading below 0.40.…”
Section: Studies That Conducted Their Own Exploratory Factor Analysismentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Etki büyüklüğünün ise en çok dispne ve duygudurum boyutlarında elde edildiği, bu boyutların yaşam kalitesi açısından tedaviden en olumlu etkilenen boyutlar olduğu söylenebilir. Nitekim yapılan yeni çalışmalarda duygudurum bozukluğunun KKY için çok önemli bir sonuç olduğu ortaya konmuştur (47,48). Kronik kalp yetersizliği olan hastalarda depresyonun saptanabilmesi ve yönetilebilmesi amacıyla çeşitli ölçek-ler geliştirilmeye çalışılmaktadır (49).…”
Section: Discussionunclassified
“…Though past research suggests the beneficial effects of social support in HF patients, some studies have failed to fi nd a negative association between social support and depressive symptoms (Paukert, LeMaire, & Cully, 2009), a positive association between social support and quality of life (Bennett, Baker, & Huster, 1998;Krethong, Jirapaet, Jitpanya, & Sloan, 2008;Volz et al, 2011), or a positive association with physical functioning (Shen et al, 2011). Some results point out that the benefi cial effect from the support provided is especially signif icant in men (Krumholz et al, 1998); while some studies have found that the association between social support and quality of life was moderated by other factors such as the type of social support considered (Friedman & King, 1994).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%