Schroevers Maya J, Ranchor Adelita V, Sanderman Robbert
Northern Centre for Healthcare Research, University of Groningen, PO Box 196, Groningen 9700 AD, Netherlands.
Soc Sci Med. 2003 Jul;57(2):375-85. doi: 10.1016/s0277-9536(02)00366-0.
The key focus of this longitudinal study in the Netherlands was to determine the role of social support (i.e. perceived availability of emotional support, lack of received problem-focused emotional support, and negative interactions) and positive and negative self-esteem in depressive symptoms in 475 recently diagnosed cancer patients and 255 individuals without cancer from the general population. Patients and the comparison group were interviewed and filled in a questionnaire at two points in time: 3 months (T1) and 15 months (T2) after diagnosis. The results indicated that social support and self-esteem were weakly to moderately related to each other. Negative self-esteem was more strongly related to all three types of social support, compared to positive self-esteem. Regression analyses showed that social support and self-esteem were independently related to depressive symptoms (concurrently), such that lower levels of social support and self-esteem were strongly associated with higher levels of depressive symptoms. This finding suggests that these two resources supplement each other additively. A longitudinal analysis showed that social support and self-esteem also predicted future levels of depressive symptoms, although the explained variance was much lower than in a cross-sectional analysis. Comparisons between cancer patients and the comparison group generally revealed no significant differences between the two groups in the associations of social support and self-esteem with depressive symptoms. The only exception was a lack of problem-focused emotional support. At three months after diagnosis, a lack of this type of support, characterised by reassuring, comforting, problem-solving, and advice, was more strongly related to depressive symptoms in patients than in the comparison group.
这项在荷兰开展的纵向研究的关键重点是,确定社会支持(即感知到的情感支持的可获得性、缺乏以问题为导向的情感支持以及消极互动)以及积极和消极自尊在475名近期确诊的癌症患者和255名来自普通人群的非癌症个体的抑郁症状中所起的作用。患者和对照组在两个时间点接受了访谈并填写了问卷:诊断后3个月(T1)和15个月(T2)。结果表明,社会支持和自尊之间的关联较弱至中等。与积极自尊相比,消极自尊与所有三种类型的社会支持的关联更强。回归分析表明,社会支持和自尊与抑郁症状(同时)独立相关,即社会支持和自尊水平较低与抑郁症状水平较高密切相关。这一发现表明,这两种资源相互补充。纵向分析表明,社会支持和自尊也能预测未来的抑郁症状水平,尽管所解释的方差远低于横断面分析。癌症患者与对照组之间的比较通常显示,两组在社会支持和自尊与抑郁症状的关联方面没有显著差异。唯一的例外是缺乏以问题为导向的情感支持。在诊断后三个月,这种以安慰、抚慰、解决问题和提供建议为特征的支持的缺乏,在患者中与抑郁症状的关联比在对照组中更强。