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Profiles of well-being and their associations with self-forgiveness, forgiveness of others, and gratitude among patients with rheumatic and musculoskeletal diseases.

Charzyńska, Edyta; Offenbächer, Martin; Halverson, Kjerstin; Hirsch, Jameson K; Kohls, Niko; Hanshans, Christian; Sirois, Fuschia; Toussaint, Loren

Authors

Edyta Charzyńska

Martin Offenbächer

Kjerstin Halverson

Jameson K Hirsch

Niko Kohls

Christian Hanshans

Loren Toussaint



Abstract

Patients with rheumatic and musculoskeletal diseases (RMDs) often experience poor well-being. Common limitations of the studies on this topic involve using variable-centred and deficit-based approaches. In this study, we used the person-centred approach to identify profiles of positive (life satisfaction and health status) and negative (depression, anxiety, fatigue, and stress) indicators of well-being among patients with RMDs. Moreover, we tested self-forgiveness, forgiveness of others, gratitude, and sociodemographics as contributors to latent profile membership. A cross-sectional questionnaire survey. Using a latent profile analysis, we investigated well-being profiles among 892 patients with RMDs (759 patients with arthritis and 133 with fibromyalgia [FM]) and examined the correlates of latent profile membership. We identified four profiles of well-being: (1) 'life dissatisfaction' (9.2%), (2) 'high well-being' (43.4%), (3) 'suboptimal well-being' (35.2%), and (4) 'very poor well-being' (12.2%). Members of Profile 2 had higher levels of self-forgiveness and gratitude than members of the remaining profiles, had higher levels of forgiveness of others than Profile 3, and were older than members of Profile 4. Moreover, members of Profile 2 had a higher proportion of patients with arthritis relative to those with FM than all other profiles and men to women than Profile 4. Patients with RMDs are heterogeneous in terms of well-being. Self-forgiveness, gratitude, and forgiveness of others may serve as psychological capital that enhances patients' well-being. Special attention should be paid to patients with FM, women, and younger patients since they can be especially susceptible to poor well-being. [Abstract copyright: © 2024 British Psychological Society.]

Citation

Charzyńska, E., Offenbächer, M., Halverson, K., Hirsch, J. K., Kohls, N., Hanshans, C., Sirois, F., & Toussaint, L. (online). Profiles of well-being and their associations with self-forgiveness, forgiveness of others, and gratitude among patients with rheumatic and musculoskeletal diseases. British Journal of Health Psychology, https://doi.org/10.1111/bjhp.12749

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Aug 2, 2024
Online Publication Date Aug 26, 2024
Deposit Date Sep 27, 2024
Journal British journal of health psychology
Print ISSN 1359-107X
Electronic ISSN 2044-8287
Publisher Wiley
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
DOI https://doi.org/10.1111/bjhp.12749
Keywords fibromyalgia, arthritis, well‐being, gratitude, forgiveness, person‐centred approach, latent profile analysis
Public URL https://durham-repository.worktribe.com/output/2864245