The longitudinal relation between patterns of goal management and psychological health in people with arthritis: The need for adaptive flexibility.
Rosa Ymkje ArendsChristina BodeErik TaalMart A F J van de LaarPublished in: British journal of health psychology (2016)
What is already known on this subject? Polyarthritis is a collective term for a variety of disorders associated with autoimmune pathologies that may affect all aspects of a person's physical, psychological, and social functioning. Patients often experience difficulties in maintaining and achieving goals in several domains of life due to disease symptoms. The process of emotional adaptation to polyarthritis is characterized by searching equilibrium between desires and constraints and reacting constructive to stressors. Goal management strategies are ways to minimize the perceived disparity between the actual and the preferred situation with regard to personal goals and are applied both consciously and unconsciously. Cross-sectional, higher levels of goal management strategies have been related to lower levels of distress and higher levels of well-being both in patients with polyarthritis and in other patient groups. What does this study add? Contributes to our understanding of how combinations of goal management strategies relate to psychological health. Identifies patterns of goal management that are longitudinally related to psychological health. Provides clear guidance for improving psychological health of people with polyarthritis.