Assessing the Relationship between Sources of Stress and Symptom Changes among Persons with IBD over Time: A Prospective Study

Author:

Bernstein Matthew T.12,Targownik Laura E.23,Sexton Kathryn A.24,Graff Lesley A.24,Miller Norine2,Walker John R.24ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, MB, Canada

2. IBD Clinical and Research Centre, Winnipeg, MB, Canada

3. Department of Internal Medicine, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, MB, Canada

4. Department of Clinical Health Psychology, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, MB, Canada

Abstract

Objective. To describe the sources of stress for persons with IBD and changes with changes in symptoms.Methods. 487 participants were recruited from a population-based IBD registry. Stress was measured at study entry and three months later, using a general stress measure and the Sources of Stress Scale. Four symptom pattern groups were identified: persistently inactive, persistently active, inactive to active, and active to inactive.Results. General stress levels were stable within each symptom pattern group over the three-month period, even for those with changing symptom activity. The persistently active group had higher general stress at month 0 and month 3 than the persistently inactive group and higher mean ratings of most sources of stress. IBD was rated as a highly frequent source of stress by 20–30% of the persistently active group compared to 1-2% of the inactive group. Finances, work, and family were rated as high frequency stresses in the persistently active group at a similar level to IBD stress. In the groups with fluctuating symptoms, there was little change in stress ratings with changes in symptom activity.Conclusion. Stress was experienced across several domains in addition to stress related to IBD. Persons with active symptoms may benefit from targeted stress interventions.

Funder

Canadian Association of Gastroenterology

Publisher

Hindawi Limited

Subject

Gastroenterology,Hepatology,General Medicine

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