Depressed mood and environmental mastery as potential pathways linking family relationship quality and disease self-management for African Americans with hypertension

Sarah B. Woods, Angela Hiefner, Patricia N.E. Roberson, Nida Zahra, Elizabeth Mayfield Arnold, Victoria Udezi

Producción científica: Articlerevisión exhaustiva

3 Citas (Scopus)

Resumen

African Americans are at significantly greater risk of hypertension and worse cardiovascular outcomes than other racialized groups, yet hypertension intervention effects remain limited. Thus, it is necessary to understand the potential mechanisms whereby interventions may be more effectively targeted to improve health. Supported by prior research evidence and guided by the Biobehavioral Family Model, this study examined associations between family relationship quality, psychological wellbeing, and self-management behaviors for African Americans with hypertension. Data were pooled from three Midlife Development in the U.S. projects, resulting in a sample of 317 African Americans (63.4% female, Mage = 53.32) with self-reported high blood pressure in the past 12 months. We tested four cross-sectional multiple mediator models, with depressed mood and environmental mastery mediating associations between family strain and exercise, smoking, problematic alcohol use, and stress-eating. Environmental mastery mediated the association between greater family strain and decreased odds of achieving recommended exercise levels; greater odds of reporting problematic alcohol use; and greater stress-eating. Though family strain was associated with depressed mood in each model, this variable did not serve as an indirect pathway to self-management behaviors. Family strain, and the potential pathway identified via environmental mastery, may be a meaningful predictor of disease self-management for African Americans with hypertension. Longitudinal studies are needed to examine directionality and to support intervention trials for improving self-management and hypertension outcomes.

Idioma originalEnglish
Páginas (desde-hasta)230-253
Número de páginas24
PublicaciónFamily Process
Volumen62
N.º1
DOI
EstadoPublished - mar 2023

Nota bibliográfica

Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 Family Process Institute.

Financiación

The MIDUS 3 studies were funded by the National Institute on Aging grant P01‐AG020166

FinanciadoresNúmero del financiador
National Institute on AgingP01‐AG020166

    ASJC Scopus subject areas

    • Social Psychology
    • Clinical Psychology
    • Social Sciences (miscellaneous)

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