Evidence of improved fluid management in patients receiving haemodialysis following a self-affirmation theory based intervention : a randomised controlled trial

Wileman, Vari, Chilcot, Joseph, Armitage, Christopher J., Farrington, Ken, Wellsted, D., Norton, Sam, Davenport, Andrew, Franklin, Gail, Da Silva Gane, Maria, Horne, Robert and Almond, Mike (2016) Evidence of improved fluid management in patients receiving haemodialysis following a self-affirmation theory based intervention : a randomised controlled trial. Psychology and Health, 31 (1). pp. 100-114. ISSN 0887-0446
Copy

Objective Haemodialysis patients are at risk of serious health complications, yet treatment non-adherence remains high. Warnings about health-risks associated with non-adherence may trigger defensive reactions. We studied whether an intervention based on self-affirmation theory reduced resistance to health-risk information and improved fluid treatment adherence. Design In a cluster randomised controlled trial, ninety-one patients either self-affirmed or completed a matched-control task before reading about the health-risks associated with inadequate fluid control. Outcome measures Patients' perceptions of the health-risk information, intention and self-efficacy to control fluid, were assessed immediately after presentation of health-risk information. Interdialytic-weight-gain (IDWG), excess fluid removed during hemodialysis, is a clinical measure of fluid treatment adherence. IDWG data were collected up to 12 months post intervention. Results Self-affirmed patients had significantly reduced IDWG levels over 12 months. However, contrary to predictions derived from self-affirmation theory, self-affirmed participants and controls did not differ in their evaluation of the health-risk information, intention to control fluid or self-efficacy. Conclusion A low-cost, high-reach health intervention based on self-affirmation theory was shown to reduce IDWG over a 12-month period but the mechanism by which this apparent behaviour change occurred is uncertain. Further work is still required to identify mediators of the observed effects.

visibility_off picture_as_pdf

picture_as_pdf
Psychology_Health_2015.pdf
subject
Published Version
lock
Restricted to Repository staff only

Request Copy
visibility_off picture_as_pdf

Published Version
lock

Atom BibTeX OpenURL ContextObject in Span OpenURL ContextObject Dublin Core MPEG-21 DIDL Data Cite XML EndNote HTML Citation METS MODS RIOXX2 XML Reference Manager Refer ASCII Citation
Export

Downloads