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Trajectories of change after a health-education program in Japan: decay of impact in anxiety, depression, and patient-physician communication

BACKGROUND: Health education can benefit people with chronic diseases. However, in previous research those benefits were small, and reinforcement to maintain them was not effective. A possible explanation is that the benefits appeared to be small and reinforcement appeared to be ineffective because...

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Autores principales: Park, Min Jeong, Green, Joseph, Jung, Hun Sik, Park, Yoon Soo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: PeerJ Inc. 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6637923/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31341730
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.7229
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author Park, Min Jeong
Green, Joseph
Jung, Hun Sik
Park, Yoon Soo
author_facet Park, Min Jeong
Green, Joseph
Jung, Hun Sik
Park, Yoon Soo
author_sort Park, Min Jeong
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Health education can benefit people with chronic diseases. However, in previous research those benefits were small, and reinforcement to maintain them was not effective. A possible explanation is that the benefits appeared to be small and reinforcement appeared to be ineffective because those analyses mixed data from two latent groups: one group of people who needed reinforcement and one group of people who did not. The hypothesis is that mixing the data from those two different groups caused the true effects to be “diluted.” METHODS: To test that hypothesis we used data from the Chronic Disease Self-Management Program in Japan, focusing on anxiety, depression, and patient-physician communication. To identify latent trajectories of change after the program, we used growth-mixture modeling. Then, to find out which baseline factors were associated with trajectory-group membership, we used logistic regression. RESULTS: Growth-mixture modeling revealed two trajectories—two groups that were defined by distinct patterns of change after the program. One of those patterns was improvement followed by backsliding: decay of impact. On anxiety and depression the decay of impact was large enough to be clinically important, and its prevalence was as high as 50%. Next, logistic regression analysis revealed that being in the decay-of-impact group could be predicted from multimorbidity, low self-efficacy, and high scores on anxiety or depression at baseline. In addition, one unexpected finding was an association between multimorbidity and better patient-physician communication. CONCLUSIONS: These results support the hypothesis that previous findings (i.e., apparently small effect sizes and apparently ineffective reinforcement) actually reflect “dilution” of large effects, which was caused by mixing of data from distinct groups. Specifically, there was one group with decay of impact and one without. Thus, evaluations of health education should include analyses of trajectory-defined groups. These results show how the group of people who are most likely to need reinforcement can be identified even before the educational program begins. Extra attention and reinforcement can then be tailored. They can be focused specifically to benefit the people with the greatest need.
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spelling pubmed-66379232019-07-24 Trajectories of change after a health-education program in Japan: decay of impact in anxiety, depression, and patient-physician communication Park, Min Jeong Green, Joseph Jung, Hun Sik Park, Yoon Soo PeerJ Epidemiology BACKGROUND: Health education can benefit people with chronic diseases. However, in previous research those benefits were small, and reinforcement to maintain them was not effective. A possible explanation is that the benefits appeared to be small and reinforcement appeared to be ineffective because those analyses mixed data from two latent groups: one group of people who needed reinforcement and one group of people who did not. The hypothesis is that mixing the data from those two different groups caused the true effects to be “diluted.” METHODS: To test that hypothesis we used data from the Chronic Disease Self-Management Program in Japan, focusing on anxiety, depression, and patient-physician communication. To identify latent trajectories of change after the program, we used growth-mixture modeling. Then, to find out which baseline factors were associated with trajectory-group membership, we used logistic regression. RESULTS: Growth-mixture modeling revealed two trajectories—two groups that were defined by distinct patterns of change after the program. One of those patterns was improvement followed by backsliding: decay of impact. On anxiety and depression the decay of impact was large enough to be clinically important, and its prevalence was as high as 50%. Next, logistic regression analysis revealed that being in the decay-of-impact group could be predicted from multimorbidity, low self-efficacy, and high scores on anxiety or depression at baseline. In addition, one unexpected finding was an association between multimorbidity and better patient-physician communication. CONCLUSIONS: These results support the hypothesis that previous findings (i.e., apparently small effect sizes and apparently ineffective reinforcement) actually reflect “dilution” of large effects, which was caused by mixing of data from distinct groups. Specifically, there was one group with decay of impact and one without. Thus, evaluations of health education should include analyses of trajectory-defined groups. These results show how the group of people who are most likely to need reinforcement can be identified even before the educational program begins. Extra attention and reinforcement can then be tailored. They can be focused specifically to benefit the people with the greatest need. PeerJ Inc. 2019-07-15 /pmc/articles/PMC6637923/ /pubmed/31341730 http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.7229 Text en © 2019 Park et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, reproduction and adaptation in any medium and for any purpose provided that it is properly attributed. For attribution, the original author(s), title, publication source (PeerJ) and either DOI or URL of the article must be cited.
spellingShingle Epidemiology
Park, Min Jeong
Green, Joseph
Jung, Hun Sik
Park, Yoon Soo
Trajectories of change after a health-education program in Japan: decay of impact in anxiety, depression, and patient-physician communication
title Trajectories of change after a health-education program in Japan: decay of impact in anxiety, depression, and patient-physician communication
title_full Trajectories of change after a health-education program in Japan: decay of impact in anxiety, depression, and patient-physician communication
title_fullStr Trajectories of change after a health-education program in Japan: decay of impact in anxiety, depression, and patient-physician communication
title_full_unstemmed Trajectories of change after a health-education program in Japan: decay of impact in anxiety, depression, and patient-physician communication
title_short Trajectories of change after a health-education program in Japan: decay of impact in anxiety, depression, and patient-physician communication
title_sort trajectories of change after a health-education program in japan: decay of impact in anxiety, depression, and patient-physician communication
topic Epidemiology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6637923/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31341730
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.7229
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