Reaction to Disease and Coping Strategies in Stressful Situations among Psoriasis Patients: Cross-Sectional Study
Beata Kowalewska, Marta Milewska-Buzun, Mateusz Cybulski, Andriej Szpakow, Dzmitry Khvorik, Marek Sobolewski, Piotr Aleksiejczuk, Wiaczesław Niczyporuk

TL;DR
This study explores how psoriasis affects quality of life and coping strategies in stressful situations, finding that disease acceptance and quality of life influence emotional and rational coping behaviors.
Contribution
The study reveals gender-specific differences in coping strategies based on psoriasis location and highlights the role of disease acceptance in emotional coping.
Findings
Psoriasis on the torso reduced task-oriented coping in women but increased it in men.
Higher disease acceptance was linked to less emotional coping in stressful situations.
Better quality of life correlated with reduced use of emotion-oriented coping strategies.
Abstract
Background: In the contemporary world, a cult of perfection is being created, and deviations from such an ideal image are becoming socially unacceptable. A particular situation arises when a defect or symptoms of a disease appear on the skin, which, in the case of people suffering from psoriasis, are a source of stress, dissatisfaction with the disease, and a reduction in quality of life. The aim of this study was to assess whether the quality of life related to the occurrence of psoriasis and the level of acceptance of the disease affect coping strategies in stressful situations. Methods: The study involved 111 people with common psoriasis (46.8% women and 53.2% men). Inclusion criteria were as follows: a diagnosis of common psoriasis for at least 0.5 years, no other types of psoriasis, no mental illnesses, and an informed consent of the respondent to participate in the study. In order…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPsoriasis: Treatment and Pathogenesis · Fibromyalgia and Chronic Fatigue Syndrome Research · Dermatology and Skin Diseases
