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Impact of Type D Personality, Role Strain, and Diabetes Distress on Depression in Women With Type 2 Diabetes: A Cross-Sectional Study.

Shi-Yu ChenHui-Chun HsuChiu-Ling HuangYi-Hsuan ChenRuey-Hsia Wang
Published in: The journal of nursing research : JNR (2023)
The negative affectivity associated with the Type D personality was shown to be more significantly associated with depression than diabetes-related psychosocial factors such as diabetes-related distress and diabetes-care-related role strain. Timely assessment of negative affectivity and the provision of brief mindfulness intervention to reduce negative affectivity may be useful in preventing depression in women with Type 2 diabetes, whereas addressing diabetes-related distress and diabetes-care-related role strain should not be neglected when providing comprehensive depression-preventing interventions to young women with diabetes.
Keyphrases
  • type diabetes
  • cardiovascular disease
  • depressive symptoms
  • glycemic control
  • randomized controlled trial
  • sleep quality
  • metabolic syndrome
  • drug induced
  • middle aged