Exploring Health Literacy and Psychological Resilience as Moderators of Symptoms of Mental Illness Among Australian Men.

IF 2.1 4区 医学 Q3 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH American Journal of Men's Health Pub Date : 2023-11-01 DOI:10.1177/15579883231211054
Oliver Black, Tyler J Lane, Huw Flatau-Harrison, Kootsy Canuto, James A Smith
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Abstract

Although highly related, mental illness may not fully determine perceived well-being, a distinction captured by dual-continuum models. Separating mental illness and well-being into related but separate constructs prompted investigation into potential buffers to reduce the impact of mental illness on perceived well-being. This study explored two such buffers in health literacy and psychological resilience among Australian men. Using the Ten to Men Australian Longitudinal Study on Male Health, this secondary data analysis of n = 8,408 men between 18 and 60 years of age assessed the moderating effect of three components of health literacy (feeling supported by health care providers, ability to find health information, and active engagement with health care providers) and psychological resilience on the relationship between mental illness and well-being. Mental illness symptoms were negatively associated with well-being, whereas psychological resilience, active engagement with health care, and health care provider support (β res = .65, β eng = .28, and β sup = .25) had positive significant relationships with the outcome (all p ≤ .001). Ability to find health information (p = .25) and psychological resilience (p = .43) were not significantly associated with well-being. Of the four interactions tested, health literacy relating to health care worker support was the only significant moderator between mental illness and well-being (β sup = .03). This study identified that meaningful support and understanding from health care providers for Australian men aged between 18 and 60 years may somewhat ameliorate the impact of mental illness on well-being. Further related investigation may reveal specific interventions that improve perceptions of support among men.

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探索健康素养和心理弹性作为澳大利亚男性精神疾病症状的调节因子。
虽然高度相关,但精神疾病可能不能完全决定感知幸福感,这是双连续体模型所捕捉到的区别。将精神疾病和幸福感划分为相关但独立的构念,促使人们研究减少精神疾病对感知幸福感影响的潜在缓冲。本研究探讨了澳大利亚男性在健康素养和心理弹性方面的两个缓冲。利用澳大利亚男性健康纵向研究,对n = 8,408名年龄在18至60岁之间的男性进行了二级数据分析,评估了健康素养的三个组成部分(卫生保健提供者支持的感觉、查找健康信息的能力和与卫生保健提供者的积极参与)和心理弹性对精神疾病与幸福感之间关系的调节作用。精神疾病症状与幸福感呈负相关,而心理弹性、积极参与卫生保健和卫生保健提供者支持(β res = 0.65, β eng = 0.28, β sup = 0.25)与结果呈显著正相关(均p≤0.001)。寻找健康信息的能力(p = 0.25)和心理弹性(p = 0.43)与幸福感无显著相关。在四个相互作用测试中,与卫生保健工作者支持相关的健康素养是精神疾病和幸福感之间唯一的显著调节因子(β sup = .03)。本研究发现,来自卫生保健提供者对18至60岁澳大利亚男性的有意义的支持和理解可能在一定程度上改善精神疾病对健康的影响。进一步的相关调查可能会揭示具体的干预措施,以改善男性对支持的看法。
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来源期刊
American Journal of Men's Health
American Journal of Men's Health PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
CiteScore
3.70
自引率
4.30%
发文量
107
审稿时长
15 weeks
期刊介绍: American Journal of Men"s Health will be a core resource for cutting-edge information regarding men"s health and illness. The Journal will publish papers from all health, behavioral and social disciplines, including but not limited to medicine, nursing, allied health, public health, health psychology/behavioral medicine, and medical sociology and anthropology.
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