“…The Common Sense Model of Self‐Regulation (CSM) proposes that patients’ coping behaviours, such as adherence, are guided by their illness perception (Moon, Moss‐Morris, Hunter, & Hughes, ). According to the CSM, when faced with illness, individuals always construct a perception of their condition which is structured around nine dimensions (Moon et al., ): (a) identity: the symptoms the patients associates with the illness (Postolica, Iorga, Petrariu, & Azoicai, ), (b) timeline acute/chronic, (c) timeline cyclical: the perceived time frame of disease development and duration (e.g., acute, chronic or cyclical) (Richardson, Schuz, Sanderson, Scott, & Schuz, ), (d) consequences: beliefs about what effect the illness may have on the patient's life (Richardson et al., ), (e) personal control: internal control perception about the disease (Richardson et al., ), (f) treatment control: beliefs about the effectiveness of administered treatment (Keskin et al., ), (g) illness coherence: the degree to which an individual feels she understands the illness (Bassi et al., ), (h) emotional representation: the degree to which an individual links negative emotions to the illness (Bassi et al., ), and (i) cause: personal ideas about aetiology (Postolica et al., ).…”