Companion Value Co-Creation and Well-Being in Older Adults with Chronic Illness: A Cross-Sectional Dyadic Study in Spain
Leticia Suárez-Álvarez, Ana Belén del Río-Lanza, Ana Suárez-Vázquez

TL;DR
This study explores how companions help older adults with chronic illness feel better by co-creating value during medical consultations in Spain.
Contribution
It identifies how companion coproduction improves patient well-being and varies by patient age.
Findings
Companion coproduction is positively linked to psychological, social, and existential well-being in patients.
Value-in-use from companions is negatively associated with patient well-being, possibly due to relational strain.
The effects of coproduction are stronger for patients aged 75 or younger.
Abstract
Background: Companion participation in medical consultations can influence the well-being of older adults with chronic illness, yet the mechanisms underlying this effect remain unclear. This study aimed (1) to examine how companion-reported value co-creation (coproduction and value-in-use) relates to patient-reported multidimensional well-being (psychological, existential, social, and physical), and (2) to test whether these associations vary according to patient and companion characteristics. Methods: A cross-sectional dyadic study of 907 patient-companion pairs (N = 1814) was conducted in Spain prior to the COVID-19 pandemic. Companions completed the adapted Spanish Value Co-creation Scale, while patients completed the McGill Quality of Life Questionnaire-Revised (MQOL-R). Construct validity was confirmed via confirmatory factor analysis, and structural equation modeling tested…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMental Health and Patient Involvement · Interprofessional Education and Collaboration · Attachment and Relationship Dynamics
