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Konstadina Griva

Nanyang Technological University

ORCID: 0000-0001-8173-5663

Publishes on Dialysis and Renal Disease Management, Diabetes Management and Education, Cancer survivorship and care. 230 papers and 6.1k citations.

230Publications
6.1kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Illness perceptions and self efficacy beliefs in adolescents and young adults with insulin dependent diabetes mellitus
Konstadina Griva, Lynn B. Myers, Stanton Newman|Psychology and Health|2000
Cited by 232

Abstract The study examined the role of illness perceptions and self-efficacy in diabetic regimen adherence and metabolic control among young patients with Insulin Dependent Diabetes Mellitus (IDDM). Sixty-four outpatients with Insulin Dependent Diabetes completed measures of illness perceptions, generalised and diabetes specific self-efficacy and a self-report measure of adherence. Metabolic control (HbAlc) was also assessed. Control, identity and consequences components of illness perceptions were significantly correlated with self-efficacy expectancies. Control beliefs were consistently associated with self-reported adherence across all treatment aspects and accounted for 39% of the predicted variance in total adherence. The associations of the other psychological predictors examined, varied depending on the regimen area. Multiple regression analysis showed that 30.8% of the variance in HbAlc assays was explained by patients' diabetes specific self-efficacy, consequences and identity. Our findings suggest that patients' beliefs are useful predictors of physiological and behavioural outcomes in diabetes self-management and should thus be the focus of routine clinical assessments and future interventions. Key Words: Diabetesadherencemetabolic controlself-efficacyillness perceptions.

Anxiety and depression in patients with end-stage renal disease: impact and management challenges – a narrative review
Zhong Sheng Goh, Konstadina Griva|International Journal of Nephrology and Renovascular Disease|2018
Cited by 202Open Access

Psychiatric disorders commonly co-exist with the diagnosis of chronic kidney disease (CKD). Research on depression and CKD has increased to a great extent. Multiple studies have demonstrated that depression is more prevalent in CKD and that end-stage renal disease is a robust risk factor for adverse outcomes such as hospitalization and mortality, yet these are often underdiagnosed or untreated. This review provides a selective overview on the prevalence rates of depression and anxiety in patients with CKD and across renal replacement therapies, the factors most consistently associated with symptoms of distress and their clinical implications. Finally, treatment and management strategies from relevant literature are appraised and discussed.