Objective: To examine relationships among changes in self-efficacy and changes in other clinically relevant outcome measures.
Method: Subjects (n = 44) were participants in a prospective, randomized stress-management study followed over 15 months. Outcome measures included self-efficacy, depression, pain, health status, and disease activity.
Results: Correlational analyses revealed significant associations between changes in self-efficacy (particularly total self-efficacy) and changes in selected measures of depression, pain, health status, and disease activity. The observed associations were not due to changes in medication regimen or to nonadherence to the stress-management program.
Conclusions: Evidence is provided that induced changes in self-efficacy following a stress-management program were significantly related to other clinically important outcome measures.