The contributions of clinical disease activity, functional disability, and illness intrusiveness to depressive symptoms in pediatric inflammatory bowel disease

Author:

Edwards Clayton S.1,Baudino Marissa N.2,Roberts Caroline M.2,Basile Nathan L.1,Dattilo Taylor M.1,Gamwell Kaitlyn L.3,Jacobs Noel J.4,Edwards Desti S.5,Tung Jeanne5,Parker Colton V.1,Chaney John M.1

Affiliation:

1. Center for Pediatric Psychology Oklahoma State University Stillwater Oklahoma USA

2. Baylor College of Medicine ‐ Texas Children's Hospital Houston Texas USA

3. School of Medicine University of South Carolina Columbia South Carolina USA

4. Department of Psychology Oklahoma City University Oklahoma City Oklahoma USA

5. Pediatric Gastroenterology Oklahoma Children's Hospital OU Health Oklahoma City Oklahoma USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundClinical disease activity associated with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) can place physical limitations on youths' activities of daily living. In turn, functional limitations potentially contribute to youths' heightened experience of IBD‐induced intrusions on a wide range of routine and valued activities (i.e., illness intrusiveness), which can increase their risk for depressive symptoms. The present study examined the contributions of clinical disease activity, functional disability, and illness intrusiveness to depressive symptoms in youth with IBD.MethodsYouth (N = 180) completed the Functional Disability Inventory (FDI), Illness Intrusiveness Scale‐Child (IIS‐C), and Children's Depression Inventory‐2 (CDI‐2). Physicians completed the Physicians Global Assessment of disease activity (PGA).ResultsResults revealed a mediating effect for functional disability in the association between disease activity and depressive symptoms (PGA → FDI → CDI‐2); illness intrusiveness mediated the association between functional disability and depressive symptoms (i.e., FDI → IIS‐C → CDI‐2). Serial mediation revealed that clinical disease activity conferred an indirect effect on youth depressive symptoms through the sequential effects of functional disability and illness intrusiveness (i.e., PGA → FDI → IIS‐C → CDI‐2).ConclusionsTaken together, these findings indicate that youth who encounter more physical limitations as a function of clinical disease activity are more likely to experience an amplified sense of IBD‐related intrusions on their ability to participate in meaningful activities. In turn, heightened illness intrusiveness increases the likelihood of depressive symptoms. Clinical interventions that help youth maintain adequate functional ability in the face of IBD disease activity and encourage involvement in positively valued activities could decrease the negative impact of IBD on youths' emotional adjustment.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Gastroenterology,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

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