Personal Resources and Total Pain: Exploring the Multiple Mediation of Fear of Recurrence, Meaning-Making, and Coping in Posttreatment Cancer Patients.
Ann Behav Med
; 58(10): 692-700, 2024 Oct 16.
Article
em En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-38850553
ABSTRACT
BACKGROUND:
People with cancer who have completed treatment still experience negative effects, such as an increased risk of experiencing cancer-related pain. Psychological factors tend to influence cancer patients' ability to cope with pain in various dimensions. Although personal resources are an important factor in buffering total pain, still little is known about the intervening variables and underlying mechanisms.PURPOSE:
The current study examined the relationship between psychological flexibility, self-esteem, and total pain, while considering fear of recurrence, meaning-making, and coping as potential mediating factors.METHODS:
Adults (N = 304) who completed medical treatment (radiotherapy, chemotherapy, and combined therapy) participated in this study. They completed questionnaires measuring the aforementioned variables. Structural equation models were used to examine mediation effects.RESULTS:
Psychological flexibility, and partly self-esteem, were negatively related to the dimensions of total pain. However, to a large extent, these relationships were serially and parallelly mediated by fear of recurrence, meaning-making, and emotion-oriented coping.CONCLUSIONS:
Consistent with the meaning-making model, cognitive (meaning-making), and affective (fear of recurrence and emotional coping) factors may be potential mechanisms underlying the association between psychological flexibility, self-esteem, and total pain in posttreatment cancer patients. In this study, they tended to interact in the area of physiological and psychosocial experiences of cancer-related pain.
A significant number of cancer patients who undergo medical treatment tend to experience pain as a consequence of medical and psychological factors. Personal resources such as psychological flexibility and self-esteem can play important roles in the pain experiences of cancer patients, including their physical, psychological, social, and spiritual symptoms. However, other factors related to anxiety and coping can also affect the relationships mentioned above. Therefore, we examined whether fear of recurrence, meaning-making, and coping serially mediated the relationships between psychological flexibility, self-esteem, and total pain in posttreatment cancer patients. A total of 304 cancer patients (159 women, 145 men) who had completed medical treatment participated in our study. Patients with higher psychological flexibility experienced lower physical, psychological, social, and spiritual pain, whereas patients with higher self-esteem felt only lower physical pain. Furthermore, posttreatment cancer patients characterized by well-defined goals and self-worth experienced lower fear of recurrence and were able to find meaning and emotionally cope with their daily predicament. As a consequence, they felt less total pain in physical, psychological, social, and spiritual dimensions. Experiencing lower fear of cancer recurrence combined with finding meaning and goals predisposes patients to more effectively deal with pain symptoms.
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Base de dados:
MEDLINE
Assunto principal:
Autoimagem
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Adaptação Psicológica
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Medo
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Dor do Câncer
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Neoplasias
Idioma:
En
Ano de publicação:
2024
Tipo de documento:
Article