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Moderating effect of IBS acceptance on psychosocial mediators of Irritable Bowel Syndrome (Pages 30-36)

Journal of Contextual Behavioral Science (JCBS)

Volume 16, April 2020, Pages 30-36

Authors

Hester Bowers, David Gillanders, Nuno Ferreira

Abstract

Background/Objective

In this study a theoretically driven model is presented of how gastrointestinal anxiety, behavioural response, symptom severity, quality of life and IBS acceptance interact to determine how people cope and respond in IBS.

Method

Cross-sectional data from 166 outpatients attending a motility disorders clinic was used to test a model of moderated serial mediation.

Results

Gastrointestinal anxiety and behavioural response were found to serially mediate the relationship between symptom severity and quality of life; each step of this ‘indirect effect’ was significant at the p < .001 level. The strength of the mediatory effect was linearly related to IBS acceptance; a significant interaction was found between IBS acceptance as a moderator at the level of the indirect effect (−0.0091, 95%CI = −0.0163 to 0.0019).

Conclusions

Findings suggest that the effect of multiple psychosocial variables in IBS experience and outcomes may be conditional on levels of IBS Acceptance. The theoretical and clinical implications of these findings are discussed.

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