The Role of Self-Compassion in Chronic Illness Care
Journal of Clinical Outcomes Management. 2016 November;23(11)
References
Whether conceived of as a momentary state or as an enduring quality, self-compassion has demonstrated consistent links with an array of indicators of psychological well-being. For example, one meta-analysis found that self-compassion is robustly and negatively linked with psychopathology (average r= –0.54), including depression and anxiety [27], 2 mental health issues that are prevalent in chronic illness populations [28,29]. Several studies have also noted associations of self-compassion with emotional resilience [18,30], and better coping and lower stress [12,13].
Self-Compassion Is Associated with Lower Perceived Stress
Relevant for our focus on chronic illness care, there is some evidence that self-compassion can be effective for improving well-being, and reducing stress in particular, in people with chronic illness. Across two illness samples, cancer and mixed chronic illnesses, those who scored low on a measure of self-compassion had higher levels of depression and stress compared to a healthy control sample [15], suggesting self-compassion may be protective against poor adjustment. Similar results have been found for breast cancer patients, with self-compassion explaining lower distress related to body image [16], and HIV patients, with self-compassion linked to lower stress, anxiety, and shame [31].
The protective role of self-compassion for stress appears to be explained primarily by the set of coping strategies that self-compassionate people use to deal with challenging circumstances. In their review, Allen and Leary [13] noted that self-compassionate people use coping styles that are adaptive and problem-focused (e.g., planning, social-support-seeking, and positive reframing), and tend to not use maladaptive coping styles (e.g., cognitively or behaviorally disengaging from the stressor and other escape-avoidance coping). Consistent with appraisal-based models of coping [32], adaptive coping strategies focus on removing the stressful event, garnering resources to better deal with the stressor, or recasting the stressor as less threatening, and therefore are instrumental in reducing the levels of stress that might normally be perceived in the absence of such coping approaches. Having access to a repertoire of adaptive coping strategies is particularly important in the context of chronic illness which can present a variety of daily challenges related to pain, functional and psychosocial limitations that require a flexible approach to changing demands.
Self-compassion with its links to adaptive coping may be particularly relevant for coping with such demands. One study put this assertion to the test by examining the role of coping strategies in explaining the link between self-compassion and stress in two chronic illness samples, inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) and arthritis [17]. In both samples, higher trait self-compassion was associated with a set of adaptive coping strategies which in turn explained greater coping efficacy and lower perceived stress, with the overall model explaining 43% of the variance in stress after controlling for health status and disease duration. Key adaptive coping strategies included greater use of active coping (a problem-focused coping strategy aimed at removing or reducing the stressor), positive reframing, and acceptance. The self-compassion–stress link was also explained in part by less use of maladaptive strategies, including denial, behavioral disengagement, and self-blame coping [17]. The latter coping strategy in particular is linked to poor adjustment in chronic illness as it reflects efforts to take control over uncontrollable symptoms by viewing illness-related changes, such as flare-ups, as a personal failure to manage one’s illness [9,33]. Together these findings, which were remarkably consistent across 2 distinct chronic illness groups, provide solid evidence to suggest that self-compassion provides individuals living with a chronic illness with a coping advantage that fosters adjustment through engaging in appropriate cognitive and behavioral coping strategies to minimize perceived stress.