Emotional Intelligence: A Novel Factor Influencing Hypertension Self-Management.
Marym AlaamriRichard J MartinChristopher BurantMary A DolanskyRonald L HickmanPublished in: Western journal of nursing research (2023)
The purpose of this study was to examine associations among emotional intelligence, quality of patient-provider interaction, and hypertension (HTN) self-management behaviors. A convenience sample of 90 adults (predominately African American women) with primary HTN were recruited from an urban ambulatory internal medicine clinic. Multivariate linear regression models were used to determine the predictive associations among the study variables. Emotional intelligence was associated with the quality of the patient-provider interaction ( r = 0.34; p < .001), patient activation ( r = 0.56; p < .001), and medication use ( r = 0.26; p = .006). The patient-provider interaction was associated with higher states of patient activation ( r = 0.42; p < .001) and medication use behavior ( r = 0.29; p = .002). Also, the quality of patient-provider interaction partially mediated the relationship between emotional intelligence and self-management behaviors. Emotional intelligence is a promising patient factor that influences quality of patient-provider interaction and self-management behaviors.
Keyphrases