Rosenberg Abby R, Yi-Frazier Joyce P, Wharton Claire, Gordon Karen, Jones Barbara
Division of Pediatric Hematology/Oncology, Seattle Children's Hospital , Seattle, Washington. ; Department of Pediatrics, University of Washington , Seattle, Washington. ; Treuman Katz Center for Pediatric Bioethics , Seattle, Washington. ; Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center , Seattle, Washington.
Department of Pediatrics, University of Washington , Seattle, Washington. ; Division of Pediatric Endocrinology, Seattle Children's Hospital , Seattle, Washington.
J Adolesc Young Adult Oncol. 2014 Dec 1;3(4):185-193. doi: 10.1089/jayao.2014.0033.
Self-perceived resilience may enable coping and mitigate poor psychosocial outcomes among adolescent and young adult (AYA) patients with cancer. In order to inform the development of resilience-promoting interventions, we aimed to: (1) describe AYA patient-reported resilience and (2) identify AYA patient-reported contributors and inhibitors of resilience. The "Resilience in Adolescents and Young Adults with Cancer" study was a prospective longitudinal mixed-methods study. Consecutive Caucasian patients aged 14-25 years old enrolled 14-60 days following their diagnosis of cancer and completed one-on-one semi-structured interviews both at the time of enrollment and 3-6 months later. Constant comparative analyses identified salient themes describing modifiable contributors and inhibitors to patient-perceived resilience. Seventeen patients (85% of those approached) enrolled in the study. The mean age was 17 years (SD=2.6) and 53% were female. All patient definitions of resilience inferred an ability to handle adversity. Five themes emerged as predominant contributors or inhibitors of resilience: (1) stress and coping; (2) goals, purpose, and planning; (3) optimism; (4) gratitude and meaning; and (5) connection and belonging. Merged analyses suggested that AYA resilience was a balance that may be enabled by promoting certain skills. AYA patients with cancer perceive resilience as a balance. Learned skills in stress management, goal-setting, and benefit-finding may empower AYAs during their cancer experience, in turn improving long-term psychosocial outcomes.
自我认知的心理韧性可能有助于青少年和青年成年(AYA)癌症患者应对并减轻不良的心理社会后果。为了为促进心理韧性的干预措施的制定提供信息,我们旨在:(1)描述AYA患者报告的心理韧性,以及(2)确定AYA患者报告的心理韧性的促成因素和抑制因素。“青少年和青年成年癌症患者的心理韧性”研究是一项前瞻性纵向混合方法研究。年龄在14 - 25岁之间的连续白种人患者在确诊癌症后14 - 60天入组,并在入组时和3 - 6个月后完成一对一的半结构化访谈。持续比较分析确定了描述患者感知心理韧性的可改变促成因素和抑制因素的突出主题。17名患者(占被邀请者的85%)参与了该研究。平均年龄为17岁(标准差 = 2.6),53%为女性。所有患者对心理韧性的定义都推断出应对逆境的能力。出现了五个作为心理韧性主要促成因素或抑制因素的主题:(1)压力与应对;(2)目标、目的和规划;(3)乐观;(4)感恩与意义;(5)联系与归属感。综合分析表明,AYA的心理韧性是一种平衡,通过促进某些技能可能得以实现。患有癌症的AYA患者将心理韧性视为一种平衡。在压力管理、目标设定和发现益处方面学到的技能可能会在AYA的癌症经历中赋予他们力量,进而改善长期的心理社会后果。