Social Cognitive Predictors of Health Promotion Self-Efficacy Among Older Adults During the COVID-19 Pandemic.

Social Cognitive Predictors of Health Promotion Self-Efficacy Among Older Adults During the COVID-19 Pandemic.

Publication date: Nov 01, 2024

To examine the relative importance of social cognitive predictors (ie, performance accomplishment, vicarious learning, verbal persuasion, affective state) on health promotion self-efficacy among older adults during COVID-19. Cross-sectional. Data collected online from participants in British Columbia (BC), Canada. Seventy-five adults (n = 75) aged ≥65 years. Health promotion self-efficacy was measured using the Self-Rated Abilities for Health Practices Scale. Performance accomplishment was assessed using the health directed behavior subscale of the Health Education Impact Questionnaire; vicarious learning was measured using the positive social interaction subscale of the Medical Outcomes Survey – Social Support Scale (MOS-SSS); verbal persuasion was assessed using the informational support subscale from the MOS-SSS; and affective state was assessed using the depression subscale from the Depression Anxiety Stress Scale (DASS-21). Multiple linear regression was used to investigate the relative importance of each social cognitive predictor on self-efficacy, after controlling for age. Our analyses revealed statistically significant associations between self-efficacy and performance accomplishment (health-directed behavior; β = .20), verbal persuasion (informational support; β = .41), and affective state (depressive symptoms; β = -. 44) at P < .05. Vicarious learning (β = -. 15) did not significantly predict self-efficacy. The model was statistically significant (P < .001) explaining 43% of the self-efficacy variance. Performance accomplishment experiences, verbal persuasion strategies, and affective states may be the target of interventions to modify health promotion self-efficacy among older adults, in environments that require physical and social distancing.

Concepts Keywords
Canada affective state
Depressive age specific
Education Aged
Seventy Aged, 80 and over
British Columbia
Cognition
COVID-19
COVID-19
Cross-Sectional Studies
cross-sectional study
Female
Health Behavior
Health Promotion
health promotion self-efficacy
Humans
Male
older adults
Pandemics
performance accomplishment
quantitative research
SARS-CoV-2
Self Efficacy
Social Support
specific populations
verbal persuasion
vicarious learning

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH COVID-19 Pandemic
disease MESH depression
disease MESH Anxiety

Original Article

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