Self-concept in Adolescents with Physical-Mental Comorbidity.

Journal of multimorbidity and comorbidity Pub Date : 2023-10-23 eCollection Date: 2023-01-01 DOI:10.1177/26335565231211475
Mark A Ferro, Megan Dol, Karen A Patte, Scott T Leatherdale, Lilly Shanahan
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Abstract

Objective: Little is known about self-concept in adolescents with physical-mental comorbidity. This study investigated whether physical-mental comorbidity was associated with self-concept in adolescents and examined if adolescent age or sex moderated the association between physical-mental comorbidity and self-concept.

Methods: Study data were obtained from the Multimorbidity in Youth across the Life-course (MY LIFE), an ongoing Canadian study of adolescents with chronic physical illness who were recruited from outpatient clinics at a pediatric hospital. A total of 116 adolescents aged ≥ 10 years provided self-reports on key measures.

Results: Adolescents with comorbidity (n = 48) had lower self-concept scores on the Self-Determination Questionnaire (SDQ; d = 0.62) and Self-Perception Profile for Children (SPPC; d = 0.53) vs. adolescents without comorbidity (n = 68). An age × comorbidity status interaction was found and age-stratified models were computed to investigate this moderating effect of age. Amongst older adolescents, comorbidity was associated with lower SDQ (B = -2.55, p < .001), but this association was not found among younger adolescents (B = -0.29, p = .680). A similar effect was found for SPPC among older (B = -0.48, p = .001) and younger adolescents (B = 0.03, p = .842). Adolescent sex was not found to be a moderator.

Conclusions: Physical-mental comorbidity in adolescence was associated with lower self-concept and this association was moderated by age-differences between adolescents with vs. without comorbidity were greater for older adolescents and were clinically relevant. Opportunities to support positive self-perceptions for adolescents with comorbidity are warranted, especially when planning the transition from pediatric to adult health services.

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身心共病青少年的自我概念。
目的:对有身心共病的青少年自我概念了解甚少。本研究调查了青少年身心共病是否与自我概念相关,并检验了青少年年龄或性别是否调节了身心共病与自我概念之间的关系,加拿大正在进行的一项研究,对象是从儿科医院门诊招募的患有慢性身体疾病的青少年。共有116名年龄≥10岁的青少年提供了关于关键措施的自我报告。结果:有共病的青少年(n=48)在自我决定问卷(SDQ;d=0.62)和儿童自我感知谱(SPPC;d=0.53)上的自我概念得分低于没有共病的少年(n=68)。发现了年龄×共病状态的相互作用,并计算了年龄分层模型来研究年龄的调节作用。在年龄较大的青少年中,共病与较低的SDQ相关(B=-2.55,p<.001),但在年龄较小的青少年中没有发现这种关联(B=-0.29,p=.680)。在年龄较大(B=0.48,p=.001)和年龄较小的少年(B=0.03,p=.842)中发现SPPC也有类似的影响。未发现青少年性别是调节因素。结论:青少年的身心共病与较低的自我概念有关,这种联系受到有和无共病青少年之间年龄差异的调节。老年青少年的共病更大,具有临床相关性。有必要为患有共病的青少年提供支持积极自我认知的机会,尤其是在计划从儿科向成人健康服务过渡时。
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