Expectations Regarding Gastein Healing Gallery Treatment and Their Connection to Health-Related Quality of Life.
Loren L ToussaintKien HuynhNiko KohlsFuschia M SiroisHannah AlbertsJameson HirschChristian HanshansQuang Anh NguyenAntje van der Zee-NeuenMartin OffenbaecherPublished in: International journal of environmental research and public health (2023)
The present study examines connections between patient expectations and health-related quality of life. We explore a key distinction between expectations about general health and expectations for functional improvement. Patients were 1444 individuals with multiple conditions experiencing chronic pain who were seeking treatment at the Gastein Healing Gallery in Böckstein, near Bad Gastein, Austria. In addition to measures of expectations, patients completed measures of pain, mental and physical health, life satisfaction, fatigue, and sleep problems. Structural equation models were used to fit a latent variable model where both expectation variables were used to predict health-related quality of life. Results showed that expectations regarding potential functional improvement resulting from treatments at the Gastein Healing Gallery were associated with improved health-related quality of life. Expectations about general health improvements related to treatment were not associated with health-related quality of life. To facilitate optimal healing, clinicians may decide to emphasize expectations about functional recovery when discussing treatment methods similar to those offered at the Gastein Healing Gallery, and in so doing, health-related quality of life may benefit.
Keyphrases
- mental health
- chronic pain
- end stage renal disease
- public health
- healthcare
- ejection fraction
- newly diagnosed
- chronic kidney disease
- palliative care
- depressive symptoms
- neuropathic pain
- prognostic factors
- combination therapy
- sleep quality
- health information
- peritoneal dialysis
- spinal cord
- climate change
- patient reported