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Coping as a Mediator of the Relationship between Stress and Anxiety in Caregivers of Patients with Acute Stroke

Yoonmi Lee, Yeoungsuk Song

2021Clinical Nursing Research11 citationsDOI

Abstract

According to Lazarus and Folkman’s theory, stress and coping affect an individual’s anxiety, which is an adaptive outcome. This study examined the mediation effects of stress-coping strategies on the relationship between stress and anxiety in caregivers of patients with acute stroke. A cross-sectional descriptive design was used to analyze a total of 131 caregivers caring for patients with acute stroke at a university hospital. The Caregivers Stress Scale, Ways of Coping Questionnaire, and Korean Beck Anxiety Inventory were used to quantify the participants’ responses. Our results revealed that emotion-focused coping (β = .56, p < .001) partially mediated the relationship between stress and anxiety ( Z = 3.30, p < .001), suggesting its ability to exacerbate anxiety in the short term by acting as a mediator between stress and anxiety. Developing appropriate coping strategies for caregivers of patients with acute stroke is therefore critical for reducing their anxiety.

Topics & Concepts

Coping (psychology)AnxietyClinical psychologyPsychologyBeck Anxiety InventoryPsychiatryBeck Depression InventoryStroke Rehabilitation and RecoveryProblem Solving Skills DevelopmentHealth and Wellbeing Research
Coping as a Mediator of the Relationship between Stress and Anxiety in Caregivers of Patients with Acute Stroke | Litcius