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ORIGINAL RESEARCH article

Front. Public Health

Sec. Aging and Public Health

This article is part of the Research TopicThe Role of Psychological Constructs in Chronic Disease Prevention and Management: A Public Health PerspectiveView all 8 articles

Effect of illness perceptionon self-regulatory fatigue in older adult patients with hypertension: chain-mediating role of self-efficacy and coping style

Provisionally accepted
Tingting  LuTingting Lu1Lihua  ShiLihua Shi1Huijun  ZhangHuijun Zhang2Jianfang  ZhangJianfang Zhang1*Yiqing  ShenYiqing Shen1*
  • 1Suzhou Municipal Hospital, Suzhou, China
  • 2Jinzhou Medical University, Jinzhou, China

The final, formatted version of the article will be published soon.

ABSTRACT Purpose: Long-term self-control becomes necessary for older adult patients with hypertension to sustain their blood pressure levels and postpone disease progression. Over extended periods, such self-control capacity among patients experiences gradual depletion, which leads to self-regulatory fatigue. Nevertheless, the connection linking disease perception, self-efficacy, coping style, and self-regulatory fatigue remains unexplored in existing studies. The present study sought to examine how disease perception, self-efficacy, and coping style relate to self-regulatory fatigue among older adult patients with hypertension. Methods: Convenience sampling method enabled the recruitment of 416 older adult patients with hypertension from the First Affiliated Hospital of Jinzhou Medical University, Liaoning Province, for this cross-sectional survey. Multiple instruments served as measurement tools, including the general demographic questionnaire, brief illness perception questionnaire, general self-efficacy scale, medical coping modes questionnaire, and self-regulatory fatigue scale. Amos23.0 software facilitated the analysis of the mediation effect. Results: Self-regulatory fatigue receives direct positive influence from disease perception, avoidance, and acceptance-resignation, whereas self-efficacy and confrontation exert direct negative influence upon it. The impact of illness perceptionon self-regulatory fatigue operates via chain mediating pathways involving self-efficacy, confrontation, avoidance, and acceptance-resignation. Conclusion: The older adult patients with hypertension had higher self-regulatory fatigue level. Positive correlations emerged between self-regulatory fatigue and disease perception, avoidance, as well as acceptance-resignation; diminishing patients' negative emotions toward disease alongside enhancing their treatment confidence contributes to lowering patients' self-regulatory fatigue.

Keywords: Aged, Hypertension, self efficacy, adaptation, self-regulatory fatigue

Received: 22 Oct 2025; Accepted: 30 Nov 2025.

Copyright: © 2025 Lu, Shi, Zhang, Zhang and Shen. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) or licensor are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.

* Correspondence:
Jianfang Zhang
Yiqing Shen

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