Illness perceptions and self-care behaviours in the first years of living with type 2 diabetes; does the presence of complications matter?
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] D. Nerenz,et al. Illness Representations and Coping With Health Threats , 2020, Handbook of Psychology and Health (Volume IV).
[2] K. Khunti,et al. Stability and predictive utility, over 3 years, of the illness beliefs of individuals recently diagnosed with Type 2 diabetes mellitus , 2014, Diabetic medicine : a journal of the British Diabetic Association.
[3] F. Wolf,et al. Standards of Medical Care in Diabetes—2016 Abridged for Primary Care Providers , 2016, Clinical Diabetes.
[4] C. van Weel,et al. Patients' and partners' illness perceptions in screen-detected versus clinically diagnosed type 2 diabetes: partners matter! , 2013, Family practice.
[5] R. Moss‐Morris,et al. Illness perceptions and glycaemic control in diabetes: a systematic review with meta‐analysis , 2011, Diabetic medicine : a journal of the British Diabetic Association.
[6] Daniel David,et al. How Are Adherent People More Likely to Think? A Meta-Analysis of Health Beliefs and Diabetes Self-Care , 2011, The Diabetes educator.
[7] K. Khunti,et al. Comparison of illness representations dimensions and illness representation clusters in predicting outcomes in the first year following diagnosis of type 2 diabetes: Results from the DESMOND trial , 2011, Psychology & health.
[8] V L Lawson,et al. The importance of health belief models in determining self‐care behaviour in diabetes , 2009, Diabetic medicine : a journal of the British Diabetic Association.
[9] K. Khunti,et al. Biomedical, lifestyle and psychosocial characteristics of people newly diagnosed with Type 2 diabetes: baseline data from the DESMOND randomized controlled trial , 2008, Diabetic medicine : a journal of the British Diabetic Association.
[10] J. Harvey,et al. The development of personal models of diabetes in the first 2 years after diagnosis: a prospective longitudinal study , 2008, Diabetic medicine : a journal of the British Diabetic Association.
[11] D. D. de Ridder,et al. No worries, no impact? A systematic review of emotional, cognitive, and behavioural responses to the diagnosis of type 2 diabetes , 2008 .
[12] A. Searle,et al. Do patients’ beliefs about type 2 diabetes differ in accordance with complications: An investigation into diabetic foot ulceration and retinopathy , 2008, International journal of behavioral medicine.
[13] N. Clark,et al. Standards of Medical Care in Diabetes: Response to Power , 2006 .
[14] Helena C Kraemer,et al. Centring in regression analyses: a strategy to prevent errors in statistical inference , 2004, International journal of methods in psychiatric research.
[15] B. Sivertsen,et al. The Revised Illness Perception Questionnaire (IPQ-R) , 2004 .
[16] Sally Thorne,et al. The Structure of Everyday Self-Care Decision Making in Chronic Illness , 2003, Qualitative health research.
[17] Martin S. Hagger,et al. A Meta-Analytic Review of the Common-Sense Model of Illness Representations , 2003 .
[18] Howard Leventhal,et al. The common-sense model of self-regulation of health and illness. , 2003 .
[19] Keith Petrie,et al. The Revised Illness Perception Questionnaire (IPQ-R) , 2002 .
[20] M Peyrot,et al. Psychological issues and treatments for people with diabetes. , 2001, Journal of clinical psychology.
[21] R. Glasgow,et al. The summary of diabetes self-care activities measure: results from 7 studies and a revised scale. , 2000, Diabetes care.
[22] W.T.M. Ooijendijk,et al. Consensus over de Nederlandse norm voor gezond bewegen , 2000 .
[23] Health control beliefs in old age-relationship with subjective and objective health, and health behaviour , 1999 .
[24] G. Rutten,et al. NHG-standaard Diabetes Mellitus type 2 (eerste herziening) , 1999 .
[25] R. Glasgow,et al. Personal-Model Beliefs and Social-Environmental Barriers Related to Diabetes Self-Management , 1997, Diabetes Care.
[26] G. R. Reed,et al. Diabetes Self-Management: Self-reported recommendations and patterns in a large population , 1997, Diabetes Care.