
Perceived Family Stress as a Predictor of Health-Related Outcomes
George R. Parkerson, Jr, MD, MPH;
W. Eugene Broadhead, MD, PhD;
Chiu-Kit J. Tse, MSPH
Arch Fam Med. 1995;4(3):253-260.
Abstract
Objective To measure the predictive effect of patientperceived family stress for health-related outcomes.
Design Prospective study of patients whose social stress and support were measured by self-report at baseline with the Duke Social Support and Stress Scale and used as predictors of outcomes during an 18-month follow-up period.
Setting Rural primary care community health clinic.
Patients Convenience sample of ambulatory adults.
Intervention None.
Main Outcome Measures Follow-up (one or more follow-up visits), frequent follow-up (more than six visits), referral and/or hospitalization (one or more), high follow-up severity of illness (upper-tertile mean Duke Severity of Illness Checklist scores), and high follow-up total charges ( $268).
Results There were 413 patients with a mean age of 40.4 years. Of these, 58.6% were women; 47.2%, African American; 52.8%, white; 56.7%, married; 77.2%, wage earners or housekeepers; and 52.3% had more than one health problem. At baseline, patients with high self-reported family stress (upper-tertile Duke Social Support and Stress Scale scores) had lower quality of life, functional health, and social support scores and higher dysfunctional health and social stress scores than other patients. High baseline family stress scores (scale of 0 to 100) predicted follow-up (odds ratio [OR]=1.014), frequent follow-up (OR=1.021), referral and/or hospitalization (OR=1.018), high severity of illness at follow-up (OR=1.016), and high follow-up charges (OR=1.018) after controlling for the effects of social support, age, gender, and race. Family stress scores were stronger predictors of these outcomes than the other social stress and support variables.
Conclusion The finding of patient-perceived family stress as a risk factor for unfavorable health-related outcomes suggests the need for early detection and treatment of family stress by family physicians.
Author Affiliations
From the Department of Community and Family Medicine, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC.
THIS ARTICLE HAS BEEN CITED BY OTHER ARTICLES
Routine Psychological Screening in Youth With Type 1 Diabetes and Their Parents: A notion whose time has come?
Cameron et al.
Diabetes Care 2007;30:2716-2724.
FULL TEXT
Psychosocial Stress and Cervical Neoplasia Risk
Coker et al.
Psychosom. Med. 2003;65:644-651.
ABSTRACT
| FULL TEXT
Work disability and health-affecting psychosocial problems among patients in general practice
Gulbrandsen et al.
Scand J Public Health 1998;26:96-100.
ABSTRACT
Stress, Illness, and the Physician
McKay
Arch Fam Med 1995;4:497-498.
ABSTRACT
|