The serial mediating role of self-esteem and health literacy in the relationship between self-efficacy and benefit finding among Chinese systemic lupus erythematosus patients
Xu Tong, Mingling Zhu, Yinsong Xu, Cancan Sun, Xuan Wang

TL;DR
This study shows how self-efficacy helps Chinese lupus patients find benefits in their illness, both directly and through improved self-esteem and health literacy.
Contribution
The study identifies a serial mediation pathway involving self-esteem and health literacy in the self-efficacy-benefit finding relationship among SLE patients.
Findings
Self-efficacy directly and significantly predicts benefit finding in SLE patients.
Self-esteem and health literacy serially mediate the relationship between self-efficacy and benefit finding.
Younger patients show a stronger indirect effect of self-efficacy on benefit finding through self-esteem and health literacy.
Abstract
To investigate the serial mediating roles of self-esteem and health literacy in the relationship between self-efficacy and benefit finding among patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), and to provide empirical evidence for developing targeted clinical interventions. A cross-sectional study was conducted using convenience sampling. A total of 207 patients with SLE were recruited from the rheumatology outpatient department of a tertiary Grade-A hospital in Zhejiang Province. Data were collected using the General Information Questionnaire, the Rosenberg Self-Esteem Scale (RSES), the Self-Efficacy for Managing Chronic Disease Scale, the Health Literacy Scale, and the Benefit Finding Scale (BFS). Pearson correlation analysis and Hayes' Process macro, were used to analyze the data. The mean scores for self-efficacy, self-esteem, health literacy, and benefit finding were 21.47 ±…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSystemic Lupus Erythematosus Research · Health Literacy and Information Accessibility · Diabetes Management and Education
