Abstract

PurposeIrritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is a functional bowel disorder with a large negative impact on HRQOL. The present study examines whether severity of bowel symptoms is directly related to HRQOL, and/or indirectly, mediated by the patients’ illness perceptions.MethodsPatients were recruited from an IBS support group (N = 123), and data were collected online. HRQOL was measured with the Quality of Life Measure for Persons with IBS and illness perceptions with the brief Illness Perception Questionnaire. Mediation models were tested using the bootstrapping procedure developed by Hayes.ResultsIrritable bowel syndrome symptom severity is directly related to total HRQOL and its subscales; after entering the mediator variables (i.e. the patients’ illness perceptions) into the model, this direct association remained only significant for total HRQOL. The relationship between bowel symptom severity and total HRQOL was partially mediated by illness perceptions, and its relationship with each of the HRQOL subscales was fully mediated by the patients’ illness perceptions. Perceived consequences were a mediator of the relationship between bowel symptom severity, total HRQOL as well as its subscales, with the exception of Sexuality.ConclusionsBowel symptom severity not only has a direct relationship with HRQOL, but also an indirect relationship via the patients’ cognitive and emotional representations of their illness. In order to better understand this relationship, future research should not only include illness perceptions but also assess cognitive and behavioural coping responses. Clinicians wanting to improve patients’ HRQOL should not only focus on the patients’ symptoms, but also on their illness beliefs and coping responses.

Highlights

  • Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is a functional disorder of the bowel, meaning that it is not characterized by any structural abnormality, but rather by unexplained pain and bowel dysfunction [1]

  • No significant differences were found between men and women, patients with a higher versus lower educational level and patients reporting a psychological cause versus a somatic cause for IBS symptoms on any of the QOL dimensions

  • Severity of bowel symptoms was significantly related to both total health-related quality of life (HRQOL) and each of the subscales

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Summary

Methods

Mediation models were tested using the bootstrapping procedure developed by Hayes

Results
Conclusions
Introduction
Study design and procedure
Participants
IPQ-ER
Sexuality
Full Text
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