7 (1.8) vs. 5.6 (2.1) *** Identity: 5.8 (2.4) vs. 7.1 (2.1)*** Concern: 5.2 (2.6) vs. 6.1 (2.6) *** Comprehensibility: 7.1 (2.0) vs. 6.6 (2.3)* Emotional response: 5.1 (2.6) vs. 6.0 (2.5)*** A? B? C+ D+ E− Higher scores on the subscales of IPQ refer to a stronger belief in serious
consequences of the disease; a stronger belief in a chronic or more changing time course; a stronger belief that the illness is controllable either by self-care or by medical care; and a better understanding of the illness respectively. VS-4718 solubility dmso Statistical significance at * P < 0.05; ** P < 0.01; *** P < 0.001. Study quality scores depict whether criterion (A) study sample representativeness, (B) loss to follow up/response rate, (C) measurement of illness perception (dimensions), (D) measurement of work participation, or (E) accounting for potential confounders is fulfilled (+), not fulfilled (−) or unclear (?) Data Autophagy phosphorylation analyses and outcomes Regardless of the analyses methods used, all studies report statistically find more significant findings for one or more illness perception dimensions (Table 1). A few studies did not use all illness dimensions of the IPQ or subsequent versions in the analyses hence some dimensions are more frequently reported, including the ‘consequences’ dimension, ‘timeline’ dimension, and the ‘control’ dimension. Although the direction of the effects for the individual illness perception dimensions was generally in the same Oxymatrine direction,
some
were significant in one study but not in the other study. As data analyses, data presentation and study quality varied considerably, direct comparisons between studies presenting absolute point estimates and studies presenting regression parameters are less informative. Considering the heterogeneity between studies, we considered pooling of the results not feasible and evaluated the results of the studies qualitatively. In the three studies reporting descriptive analyses, overall higher scores on the dimension consequences, timeline, identity and concern were observed in the non-working groups reflecting a negative relationship, whereas higher scores on the dimensions’ control and coherence reflected a positive relationship on work participation as seen in the working group (Petrie et al. 1996; Boot et al. 2008; Sluiter and Frings-Dresen 2008). The result of the causal dimension was not reported in most studies, except for the study by Boot et al. (2008) because this scale often consisted of open questions. Although all illness dimensions showed differences of various magnitudes indicating more maladaptive beliefs in the non-working group, some were not statistically significant. The magnitude of the differences between groups were small; for example, those who did not work rated the consequences of their disease on average between 1 and 2 points more severe (on 0–10 scale) (Boot et al. 2008; Sluiter and Frings-Dresen 2008) compared to those who did work.