The Mediating Role of Psychological Well-Being in the Relationship Between Self-Management and Quality of Life in Patients With Hypertension

Author:

Lee Mei-Chen1ORCID,Tai Chun-Yi1,Liu Chuan-Chieh2,Wang Wen-Hug3,Chang Ching-Fen1,Chen Meng-Qi4

Affiliation:

1. School of Nursing, National Taipei University of Nursing and Health Sciences, Taipei City, Taiwan

2. Department of Medicine, Cardinal Tien Hospital, New Taipei City, Taiwan

3. Department of Nursing, Cardinal Tien Hospital, New Taipei City, Taiwan

4. Department of Nursing, Taipei Veterans General Hospital, Taipei City, Taiwan

Abstract

This study applied a cross-sectional design to examine the relationship between self-management, psychological well-being, and quality of life in patients with hypertension and evaluated the mediation effect of psychological well-being on self-management and quality of life. Through purposive sampling, this study enrolled 255 patients with hypertension from the cardiology department of a teaching hospital in Taiwan. Mediation effects were estimated using linear regression and the Sobel test. Age, number of chronic diseases, waist circumference, self-management, and psychological well-being explained 18.7% of the total variance in quality of life. Psychological well-being partially mediated the effects of self-management on quality of life, with a total effect of 19.2%. Psychological well-being is an important factor correlated with self-management and quality of life in patients with hypertension.

Funder

National Taipei University of Nursing and Health Sciences, Taiwan

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Nursing

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