Psychology 2036A/B Chapter Notes - Chapter 11: Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, Body Image, Fibromyalgia
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Psychology 2036 chapter 11: living with chronic illness. O(cid:374)e i(cid:373)po(cid:396)ta(cid:374)t aspe(cid:272)t of (cid:395)ualit(cid:455) of life is people"s pe(cid:396)(cid:272)eptio(cid:374)s of thei(cid:396) o(cid:449)(cid:374) health. Self-reports of health status have been found to predict morbidity and mortality beyond medical and psychological factors. Perhaps the most important impetus for evaluating quality of life stems from the psychological distress patients with a chronic illness often experience. Quality of life has several components specifically, physical functioning, psychological status, social functioning and disease or treatment related symptomology. There are generic measures that can be used across a variety of different health conditions and chronic diseases, as well as disease-specific measu(cid:396)es to help u(cid:374)de(cid:396)sta(cid:374)d ho(cid:449) a pa(cid:396)ti(cid:272)ula(cid:396) (cid:272)h(cid:396)o(cid:374)i(cid:272) ill(cid:374)ess (cid:373)a(cid:455) i(cid:373)pa(cid:272)t a(cid:374) i(cid:374)di(cid:448)idual"s (cid:395)ualit(cid:455) of life. Quality of life may also fluctuate depending on the characteristics of the illness, acute changes in symptoms and age-related changes in health over time. Culture can also play a role in how a chronic illness impacts quality of life.