Abstract
The current study examined effects of three ways of providing spousal support (active engagement, protective buffering, and overprotection) on self-efficacy and physical and mental health in patients with diseases imposing a high demand on self-management routines (36 asthma patients and 21 diabetic patients). Employing a nine-month prospective design, we hypothesized that active engagement would be positively related to health and self-efficacy, that overprotection would have a negative impact, and that the impact of protective buffering would depend on symptom level at baseline. Results confirmed the latter hypothesis while either positive or negative effects of active engagement and overprotection were absent. These findings are discussed with respect to the role of spousal support in diseases requiring self-management behaviour.
Notes
Because of the relatively small sample size, we repeated all regression analyses without the control variables in step 1 to increase power. This is justifiable since neither disease category nor experimental condition correlated significantly with any of the dependent variables (see ). These analyses showed the same results as the ones presented in the text.