Título Vitality, mental health and role-physical mediate the influence of coping on depressive symptoms and self-efficacy in patients with non-alcoholic fatty liver disease: A cross-sectional study
Autores FUNUYET SALAS, JESÚS, Angeles Perez-San-Gregorio, Maria , Martin-Rodriguez, Agustin , Romero-Gomez, Manuel
Publicación externa Si
Medio JOURNAL OF PSYCHOSOMATIC RESEARCH
Alcance Article
Naturaleza Científica
Cuartil JCR 2
Cuartil SJR 1
Impacto JCR 4.7
Impacto SJR 1.131
Fecha de publicacion 01/11/2022
ISI 000911796400012
DOI 10.1016/j.jpsychores.2022.111045
Abstract Objective: Our aim was to determine whether the association between active coping and depressive symptoms in patients with non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) was mediated by vitality, and whether diabetes and obesity could impact on this relationship. We also wanted to find out whether mental health and role-physical modulated the relationship between passive/avoidance coping and self-efficacy, and the role of liver fibrosis.\n Methods: Depressive symptoms (BDI-II), self-efficacy (GSE), coping (COPE-28) and quality of life (SF-12) were evaluated in 509 biopsy-proven NAFLD patients in this cross-sectional study. Mediation and moderated mediation models were conducted using the SPSS PROCESS v3.5 macro.\n Results: Vitality mediated the relationship between active coping and depressive symptoms (-2.254, CI = -2.792 to -1.765), with diabetes (-0.043, p = 0.017) and body mass index (BMI) (-0.005, p = 0.009) moderating the association. In addition, mental health (-6.435, CI = -8.399 to -4.542) and role-physical (-1.137, CI = -2.141 to -0.315) mediated the relationship between passive/avoidance coping and self-efficacy, with fibrosis stage (0.367, p < 0.001) moderating this association. Specifically, the presence of diabetes and significant fibrosis, and a higher BMI, were associated with greater negative impact on participant depressive symptoms or self-efficacy.\n Conclusion: A maladaptive coping style was associated with poorer vitality, mental health and role-physical in NAFLD patients, which along with the presence of metabolic comorbidity (diabetes and obesity) and significant fibrosis predicted more depressive symptoms or poorer self-efficacy in these patients. These results suggested incorporating emotional and cognitive evaluation and treatment in patients with NAFLD.
Palabras clave Depression; Self-efficacy; Fibrosis; Metabolic disease; NAFLD
Miembros de la Universidad Loyola

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