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Social support and conscientiousness in hemodialysis adherence

Patricia J. Moran
Alan J. Christensen, University of Iowa
William J. Lawton

Abstract

Previous conclusions regarding the role of social support in hemodialysis adherence are inconsistent, suggesting that other factors may moderate this relationship. Using the Five-Factor Model of Personality, we examined the hypothesis that conscientiousness would interact with social support in predicting fluid-intake and medication adherence in a sample of 56 chronic hemodialysis patients. Hierarchical regression analyses (controlling for demographic, clinical, and other personality variables) revealed a significant interaction between social support and conscientiousness. However, inconsistent with prediction, high support among patients with low conscientiousness was associated with poorer fluid-intake adherence, while support had little effect on fluid-intake adherence among high conscientiousness patients. No main or interactive effects were found for support or conscientiousness on a measure of medication adherence.

Suggested Citation

Patricia J. Moran, Alan J. Christensen, and William J. Lawton. "Social support and conscientiousness in hemodialysis adherence" Annals of Behavioral Medicine 19.4 (1997): 333-338.