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Effects of received and mobilized support on recipients' and providers' self-efficacy beliefs : A one-year followup study with patients receiving radical prostatectomy and their spouses

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2009

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Knoll, Nina
Burkert, Silke
Roigas, Jan
Gralla, Oliver

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International Journal of Psychology. 2009, 44(2), pp. 129-137. ISSN 0020-7594. eISSN 1464-066X. Available under: doi: 10.1080/00207590701607930

Zusammenfassung

F rom a proactive agentic perspective, social support is not just seen as a protective cushion against environmental demands. Rather, support may facilitate an individual's self-regulation by enhancing perceived self-efficacy (i.e., enabling hypothesis). In the present study, patient-reported indicators of mobilized and received spousal support as predictors of their own and their spouses' self-efficacy beliefs were investigated within I year following radical prostatectomy. During this time frame, postoperative sequelae such as urinary incontinence and erectile dysfunctions are still likely to interfere with couples' everyday activities. Seventy-two patients receiving radical prostatectomy and their spouses participated. Patients' and spouses' self-efficacy beliefs and patients' received and mobilized spousal support were assessed prior to and 12 months following surgery. Additional patient-reported covariates at I year post-surgery were degree of bother by urinary incontinence, overall sexual satisfaction, and relationship satisfaction. Results indicated that patients' received spousal support was associated with higher levels of patients' self-efficacy only cross-sectionally, but not longitudinally. Support mobilized by the patient prior to and I year after surgery, however, positively predicted spouses' levels and changes in self-efficacy. Results, thus, did not fully confirm predictions by the enabling hypothesis of social support; rather, associated .aspects, such as the degree of being mobilized as a provider of support or being
needed, seem to enhance agency beliefs in spouses.

Zusammenfassung in einer weiteren Sprache

S elon une perspective proactive agentique, le soutien social n'est pas seulement vu comme un tampon protecteur contre les demandes environnementales. En effet, le soutien peut plutat faciliter I'auto-regulation d'un individu en favorisant la perception de l'auto-efficacite (i.e. hypothese operationnelle). La presente etude a
examine les indicateurs rapportes par les patients concernant le soutien conjugal mobilise et re9u dans l'annee suivant une prostatectomie radicale en tant que predicteurs de leurs propres croyances d'auto-efficacite et de celles de leurs conjointes. Dans ce cadre temporel, des sequelles postoperatoires telles que I'incontinence urinaire et les dysfonctions erectiles sont toujours enclines a interferer avec les activites quotidiennes du couple. Soixantedouze patients recevant une prostatectomy radicale et leurs conjointes ont participe a cette etude. Les croyances d'auto-efficacite des patients et celles de leurs conjointes ainsi que le soutien conjugal des patients re9u et mobilize a ete evalue avant et 12 mois apres l'operation. Les covariables rapportees par les patients un an apres l'operation etaient le degre de derangement cause par l'incontinence urinaire, la satisfaction sexuelle globale et la satisfaction relationnelle. Les resultats ont indique que le soutien conjugal reyU par les patients etait associe avec des niveaux
plus eleves d'autoefficacite chez les patients seulement de maniere transversale et non pas longitudinalement. Le soutien mobilise par le patient avant et un an apres I'operation a cependant predit positivement les niveaux et les changements d'auto-efficacite. Ainsi, les resultats n'ont pas completement confirme les predictions par
l'hypothese operationnelle du soutien social. PlutOt, des aspects associes tels que le degre d'etre mobilise comme donneur du soutien ou le fait de se sentir utile semblent favoriser les croyances des conjointes sur I'efficacite et les consequences de leurs actions.

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150 Psychologie

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ISO 690KNOLL, Nina, Urte SCHOLZ, Silke BURKERT, Jan ROIGAS, Oliver GRALLA, 2009. Effects of received and mobilized support on recipients' and providers' self-efficacy beliefs : A one-year followup study with patients receiving radical prostatectomy and their spouses. In: International Journal of Psychology. 2009, 44(2), pp. 129-137. ISSN 0020-7594. eISSN 1464-066X. Available under: doi: 10.1080/00207590701607930
BibTex
@article{Knoll2009-04Effec-21036,
  year={2009},
  doi={10.1080/00207590701607930},
  title={Effects of received and mobilized support on recipients' and providers' self-efficacy beliefs : A one-year followup study with patients receiving radical prostatectomy and their spouses},
  number={2},
  volume={44},
  issn={0020-7594},
  journal={International Journal of Psychology},
  pages={129--137},
  author={Knoll, Nina and Scholz, Urte and Burkert, Silke and Roigas, Jan and Gralla, Oliver}
}
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