Although severity has a negative impact on QOL of patients with asthma, adequate coping strategies may mediate these negative effects [
9,
10]. In this study, coping is defined as a set of behavioural and cognitive responses designed to manage the stressors of a situation [
11]. In adults with asthma, emotional coping (a passive affective reaction to the problem) and avoidant coping (ignoring, denying or avoiding a problem) are associated with poorer QOL [
9,
10], whereas active coping (taking an active approach to the problem, whether cognitive or behavioural) is associated with better QOL [
9]. To our knowledge, no studies have examined the impact of coping on QOL in adolescents with asthma. Because of the specific issues adolescents encounter in comparison to adults, school absence, the role of parents, and concerns about peer relationships, it may not be possible to generalise the findings for adults to adolescents.
The goal of the present study was to determine which coping strategies are associated with a better QOL among adolescents with asthma. It is hoped that identification of these strategies will provide important directions for designing interventions aimed at improving QOL in adolescents with asthma. Coping strategies were found to mediate the relation between symptom severity and QOL in patients with other chronic conditions [
12]. We hypothesised that coping strategies could also mediate the effect of asthma severity on QOL in adolescents with asthma. Therefore, we also aimed to examine the indirect relation between asthma severity and QOL via coping. Because girls report more symptoms of asthma [
13] and lower QOL [
7] than boys do, but seem better adapted to living with asthma [
14], we also examined gender differences in coping, severity, and QOL, as well as the relationships between these concepts.
Discussion
This study has found that asthma symptom severity is negatively associated with asthma-specific QOL in adolescents with asthma. The findings provide support for the hypothesis that coping mediates the negative relationship between severity and QOL. Thus, the use of adequate coping strategies to deal with symptoms of asthma appears to prevent adolescents with asthma from experiencing a decline in their QOL.
How do adolescents with asthma cope with their asthma? The most reported coping strategy was
positive reappraisal, indicating that adolescents with asthma try to actively cope with their asthma. However, the two next most frequently used strategies are passive coping strategies:
hiding asthma and ignoring asthma, which shows that adolescents also commonly use avoidant coping strategies.
Worrying about asthma was the least used coping strategy. Similar results have been found in a study on coping in chronically ill adolescents, where avoidance and confrontation were the most frequently used coping styles, and depressive reactions the least used [
31]. Although there is similar ordering of coping styles between boys and girls, this study also found gender differences in coping. Girls reported using all coping strategies more often than boys, consistent with a study by Wilson et al. [
32] which showed that female adolescents reported to use all studied coping styles (avoidant coping, problem-focused coping, and emotional coping) more often than males.
While symptom severity was only indirectly related to positive effects QOL, symptom severity was both directly and indirectly related to overall QOL. When adolescents experience more symptoms, they have poorer overall QOL. This association has been shown in previous studies, both among adults [
6] and adolescents [
5,
7,
8]. Due to the cross-sectional nature of this study, we cannot determine the direction of the associations found. Part of this association may be explained by good QOL leading to better self-management of asthma, thereby reducing symptoms of asthma.
Although we have to be careful with interpreting the directionality of the identified relationships, these results suggest that coping mediates the effect of symptom severity on QOL, indicating that interventions based on changing coping strategies may be an approach to improve QOL in adolescents with asthma. A review on the impact of interventions designed to improve coping by de Ridder and Schreurs [
33] suggests such approaches offer ‘a promising framework for the development of psychosocial care for chronically ill patients’.
Leading a
restricted lifestyle was one of the coping strategies found to mediate the relation between severity and
overall QOL. When adolescents experience more symptoms, they avoid situations and triggers, which in turn is associated with poorer
overall QOL. This restricted lifestyle may cause adolescents to avoid peer activities, such as parties or extracurricular activities, and thereby decrease their satisfaction with life. Similar results are found in adults with asthma, where avoidant coping was shown to be related to lowered QOL [
9,
10].
Another mediating coping strategy was
worrying about asthma. Increased symptom severity was related to more worrying, which in turn decreased overall QOL. This is consistent with the study of Hesselink et al. [
10], who showed a negative association between emotional coping and QOL among adults with asthma.
To improve QOL in adolescents with asthma, interventions could be aimed at decreasing a restricted lifestyle and worrying about asthma. This might be done by teaching adolescents to recognize their triggers of asthma and by promoting greater self-management of their illness. This could increase their self-efficacy expectations, such that by feeling more in control of asthma, adolescents may feel less inclined to avoid particular situations such as parties and playing sports. This increased self-efficacy might also reduce worrying about asthma. In addition, interventions could also focus on cognitive restructuring and relaxation to reduce worrying, and thereby enhance QOL among adolescents with asthma.
With regard to the
positive QOL domain,
hiding asthma and
positive reappraisal were the two mediating coping strategies most strongly related to
positive QOL. Adolescents with worse asthma severity tended to hide their asthma more, which was related to lower
positive QOL. This may result in fewer people from their social environment being aware of their condition, which may reduce the opportunities for social support, and potentially thus experience fewer positive effects. Interventions that target individuals, such as social skills training or assertiveness training, or interventions that target schools, such as the Asthma Friendly Schools Program [
34], might help adolescents feel more able to inform others about their illness. Peer support groups like ChIPS (Chronic Illness Peer Support) [
35] and the Triple A program [
36] may also help to build resilience and enhance self-confidence and self-acceptance, making it easier for adolescents to be open rather than hide their asthma.
Positive reappraisal was the coping strategy most strongly related to
positive QOL. Adolescents who tried to see positive aspects of their asthma also perceived more positive effects. Part of this association may be due to overlap in constructs. However, studies showed that optimistic persons have greater friendship networks [
37], longer friendships [
38], and perceive more social support [
37]. Therefore we assume that part of the association found in this study is not due to overlap but due to a more positive mindset of the adolescents, making it easier for their social environment to react in a positive way to the adolescent. This is in line with Folkman & Moskowitz [
39], who emphasize the role of positive reappraisal in coping with chronic illness. Although positive reappraisal seems to affect
positive QOL among adolescents with asthma, this coping strategy might be hard to target in interventions because of the effect of personality factors such as optimism, which have been shown to be related to emphasizing positive aspects of stressful situations [
40].
This is the first study to describe the relation between coping strategies and QOL in adolescents with asthma. A strength of this study is the use of a large community sample, which is ruling out the risk of a self-selection bias, and includes adolescents with all levels of asthma severity. This study also used validated instruments specifically designed for adolescents with asthma. The use of sophisticated statistical methods to test relations between severity, coping and QOL allowed testing of both direct and indirect paths, testing group differences in these direct and indirect paths, and decreasing measurement error by using latent factors.
Some of the standardized regression coefficients in the model are weak but significant, which may be partly due to the larger sample size. However, the strengths of these paths are similar to those found in other studies on the relation between coping and QOL [
10], and the total model explains 56% of the variance in overall QOL and 19% in positive QOL. When severity was excluded from the model, the model still explained 45% of the variance of overall QOL and 18% of positive QOL, indicating the clinical relevance of coping strategies in QOL among adolescents with asthma. Another limitation of this study is the low reliability of three of the coping subscales, which could have influenced the model. However, coping is a difficult construct to measure, and other coping scales like COPE [
41], which are frequently used [
37] show Cronbachs alpha’s in the same range as those reported in the present study. Furthermore, the alpha’s reported in the present study are in line with the validation study (α ranging from .63 to .84) [
23]. A third limitation is that due to the cross-sectional nature of this study, we cannot determine the direction of the associations found. For instance, we assume that severity influences coping, but we cannot rule out the possibility that coping affects symptom severity as well. Thus hiding asthma could lead to a decrease in adherence due to not taking medication in peer settings, which in turn could lead to an increase in symptoms. In regard to the relations between QOL and coping, while worrying about asthma may lead to poorer overall QOL, it is also possible that lower QOL may result in adolescents worrying more about their asthma. Longitudinal designs could provide more insight into the underlying mechanism of the relations found in this study. Further research would also benefit from including personality factors, such as optimism, and other measures of psychosocial well being, such as depression, which may affect both QOL and coping strategies. Finally, since the responsibility for the management of asthma is transferred from parent to adolescent, further studies that include family factor could also provide fresh insights.