Friedman Lois C, Kalidas Mamta, Elledge Richard, Chang Jenny, Romero Catherine, Husain Inna, Dulay Mario F, Liscum Kathleen R
Menninger Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX 77030, USA.
Psychooncology. 2006 Jul;15(7):595-603. doi: 10.1002/pon.992.
Personality, psychosocial, demographic and medical variables have been identified as correlates of adjustment to breast cancer and quality of life (QoL). Most studies have examined relationships between personality, social support and adjustment to cancer in predominantly middle-class Caucasian samples, thus limiting the generalizability of their findings. Eighty-one female outpatients at a medical oncology breast clinic in a county general hospital serving primarily indigent Hispanic and African-American patients completed measures assessing demographic and medical information, health-related QoL, cancer-specific distress, mood disturbance, dispositional optimism and satisfaction with social support. Older age, receipt of treatment and greater optimism accounted for 41% of the variance in emotional well-being (p<0.01). Absence of family history of breast cancer, receipt of treatment and optimism accounted for 43% of the variance in functional well-being (p<0.01). Optimism and satisfaction with social support accounted for 43% of the variance in social/family well-being (p<0.01). Absence of treatment (not yet treated) and pessimism accounted for 31% of the variance in cancer-specific distress (p<0.01). Finally, family history of breast cancer and pessimism accounted for 48% of the variance in mood disturbance (p<0.001). Family history of breast cancer and pessimism were related to mood disturbance (p<0.001). No between-group differences were found for race/ethnicity for any of the variables. Encouraging positive expectations and facilitating social support may help women in public sector medical settings cope with the stressful demands of diagnosis and treatment of breast cancer regardless of race/ethnicity.
人格、心理社会、人口统计学和医学变量已被确定为与乳腺癌适应和生活质量(QoL)相关的因素。大多数研究主要在以白人为主的中产阶级样本中考察人格、社会支持与癌症适应之间的关系,因此限制了其研究结果的普遍性。一家主要服务贫困西班牙裔和非裔美国患者的县综合医院的肿瘤内科乳腺门诊的81名女性门诊患者完成了评估人口统计学和医学信息、健康相关生活质量、癌症特异性困扰、情绪障碍、性格乐观和社会支持满意度的测量。年龄较大、接受治疗和更高的乐观情绪占情绪幸福感差异的41%(p<0.01)。无乳腺癌家族史、接受治疗和乐观情绪占功能幸福感差异的43%(p<0.01)。乐观情绪和社会支持满意度占社会/家庭幸福感差异的43%(p<0.01)。未接受治疗(尚未治疗)和悲观情绪占癌症特异性困扰差异的31%(p<0.01)。最后,乳腺癌家族史和悲观情绪占情绪障碍差异的48%(p<0.001)。乳腺癌家族史和悲观情绪与情绪障碍相关(p<0.001)。在任何变量上均未发现种族/族裔之间的组间差异。鼓励积极期望并促进社会支持可能有助于公共部门医疗环境中的女性应对乳腺癌诊断和治疗的压力需求,无论其种族/族裔如何。