Bachmann, Nicole

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Nicole
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Bachmann, Nicole

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  • Publikation
    Reciprocal association between social support and psychological distress in chronic physical health conditions: A random intercept cross‐lagged panel model
    (Wiley, 23.09.2023) Debnar, Caroline; Peter, Claudio; Morselli, Davide; Michel, Gisela; Bachmann, Nicole; Carrard, Valerie [in: Applied Psychology: Health and Well-Being]
    The onset of a chronic physical health condition (CHC) can highly impact individuals' well‐being and mental health. Social support has been shown to help people rebound after the onset of a CHC. Nonetheless, little is known about the longitudinal pattern of social support and its reciprocal association with mental health in CHC. This study aimed to illustrate the longitudinal pattern of perceived social support and to examine the reciprocal association between perceived social support and psychological distress across 6 years. Two random intercept cross‐lagged panel models were conducted, one for emotional and one for practical support, using yearly assessments of 582 Swiss Household Panel's participants reporting a CHC. A reciprocal association was found, with psychological distress 1 year after the onset being linked to less emotional support in the following year and vice versa, more emotional support being linked to less psychological distress the following year. A unidirectional association was found for practical support, with more psychological distress 1 year before the CHC onset being linked to more practical support at the onset year. This study underlines the importance of involving the social environment of individuals living with a CHC, especially around the first year after the onset.
    01A - Beitrag in wissenschaftlicher Zeitschrift
  • Publikation
    Lebenswelten, Umweltfaktoren und gesellschaftliche Rahmenbedingungen
    (Hogrefe, 27.08.2020) Bachmann, Nicole; Meyer, Stefan; Zumbrunn, Andrea; Peter, Claudio; Diebold, Monika; Delgrande Jordan, Marina; Dratva, Julia; Kickbusch, Ilona; Stronski, Susanne [in: Gesundheit in der Schweiz – Kinder, Jugendliche und junge Erwachsene. Nationaler Gesundheitsbericht 2020]
    In diesem Kapitel werden die in der Schweiz vorliegenden wissenschaftlich gestützten Informationen zu den Ressourcen und Belastungen der Lebenswelten von Kindern, Jugendlichen und jungen Erwachsenen vorgestellt. Dabei werden soziale, ökologische und ökonomische Aspekte berücksichtigt und im Hinblick auf Fragen der Chancengleichheit diskutiert. Die Zusammenstellung von zentralen Daten und Studienergebnissen aus der Schweiz wird ergänzt durch eine Befragung von Expertinnen und Experten aus der Kinder- und Jugendpolitik. Weiterführende Informationen finden sich in aktuellen gesamtschweizerischen Übersichtspublikationen, insbesondere dem Familienbericht (BFS, 2017a), dem Bildungsbericht (SKBF, 2018) und dem Sozialbericht (BFS, 2019a).
    04A - Beitrag Sammelband
  • Publikation
    Psychological distress trajectories in chronic physical health conditions
    (American Psychological Association, 02.12.2019) Debnar, Caroline; Carrad, Valerie; Morselli, Davide; Michel, Gisela; Bachmann, Nicole; Peter, Claudio [in: Health Psychology]
    Objective: The onset of a chronic health condition (CHC) can have a severe impact on an individual's life, affecting mental and physical health. This study's goal was to investigate psychological distress trajectories starting from 1 year before to 4 years after the onset of a physical CHC. The specific aims were to identify the number and shape of longitudinal psychological distress trajectories and to test health-related, psychological, social, and demographic factors predicting these trajectories. Method: Two samples were drawn from the Swiss Household Panel data set: a CHC sample (n = 361) and a 1-to-1 matched comparison sample of healthy individuals. Latent growth mixture modeling was used to identify psychological distress trajectories over 6 years. Factors predicting trajectories were then tested using multinomial logistic regression. Results: Four psychological distress trajectories were identified in the CHC sample: resilience (53.9%), chronic (22.2%), delayed (15.0%), and recovery (8.9%). In the comparison sample, two trajectories were identified: low psychological distress (90%) and elevated psychological distress (10%). Protective factors associated with resilient trajectory membership in the CHC sample were higher emotional stability, higher relationship satisfaction, and male gender. Conclusion: Individuals living with a CHC had an increased risk of vulnerability compared with a sample of healthy individuals. This advocates awareness of mental health issues following the onset of a CHC. In this regard, biopsychosocial factors (gender, emotional stability, and relationship satisfaction) offer prevention and intervention opportunities for more vulnerable individuals. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2019 APA, all rights reserved).
    01A - Beitrag in wissenschaftlicher Zeitschrift