Abstract

On the basis of Mischel's (1984) social learning analysis of the process of delay of gratification in children and in line with Bandura's (1977) self-efficacy theory, we developed a model of delay of gratification in adults and tested it on dialysis patients who were continuously required to comply with a stringent regimen of fluid-intake to keep alive. We hypothesized that patients' self-evaluations of their past compliance and their efficacy expectations would be associated with their actual delay behavior. Underlying these process-regulating cognitions would be stable competencies, such as learned resourcefulness (i.e., one's self-control skills). Fifty-three dialysis patients self-evaluated their fluid intake compliance, their efficacy expectations, and their health beliefs. Resourcefulness was assessed by Rosenbaum's Self-Control Schedule. Actual fluid-intake compliance was reliably assessed by the mean body weight increase between dialyses during the 3-month period prior to the study and during two follow-up periods. The results supported the model. On the one hand, self-efficacy expectations were related to persistence with the fluid diet and on the other hand to subjects' self-evaluation of their past adherence behavior as well as to their resourcefulness. Although the path model suggested a causal pattern, the correlational nature of the study precluded any conclusions on cause-effect relationship.

Keywords

PsychologyDelay of gratificationSelf-efficacyPersonalityDevelopmental psychologySocial cognitive theoryProcrastinationCompliance (psychology)CognitionSelf-controlPath analysis (statistics)Clinical psychologySocial psychologyPsychiatry

Related Publications

Publication Info

Year
1986
Type
article
Volume
51
Issue
2
Pages
357-364
Citations
107
Access
Closed

External Links

Social Impact

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

107
OpenAlex

Cite This

Michael Rosenbaum, Karin Ben-Ari Smira (1986). Cognitive and personality factors in the delay of gratification of hemodialysis patients.. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology , 51 (2) , 357-364. https://doi.org/10.1037//0022-3514.51.2.357

Identifiers

DOI
10.1037//0022-3514.51.2.357