The objective of this ex post facto study was to find out how different coping and personality styles influence satisfaction with life in a group of 55 people with chronic kidney disease, 34 of whom were receiving haemodialysis and 21 had undergone a kidney transplant. The participants completed three questionnaires, the SWLS, CAEPO and MIPS. The results showed the relationship between active coping strategies and satisfaction with life in haemodialysis patients, kidney transplant recipients and the total sample. A Pleasure-Enhancing personality style was significantly related to Satisfaction with Life, both in the total sample, and in the two groups separately. There were no significant differences in Satisfaction with Life between the haemodialysis patients and kidney transplant recipients. The theoretical repercussions of these results are discussed, highlighting their applications to clinical practice, in which training in active coping is essential.
La satisfacción vital es el principal indicador del bienestar subjetivo, importante parámetro de salud pública. Se pretende conocer si el padecimiento de distintas enfermedades crónicas implica diferencias en dicho indicador, así como identificar qué características de personalidad resultan más adaptativas en cada caso. Este estudio transversal cuenta con una muestra de 160 personas pertenecientes a cinco grupos (personas en tratamiento de hemodiálisis, con trasplante renal, con artritis reumatoide, con espondilitis anquilosante y control) a las que se les administró el inventario de estilos de personalidad normal de Millon ( 2001) y la escala de satisfacción vital de Diener Emmons, Larsen y Griffing (1985). El grupo de hemodiálisis presenta los niveles más bajos de satisfacción vital; las variables de personalidad explican gran parte de la varianza en satisfacción en todos los grupos excepto en el de trasplante. Dichos factores de personalidad facilitarían la prevención terciaria al mejorar el ajuste psicológico y evitar la comorbilidad.
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