Department of Advertising, UF Health Cancer Center, STEM Translational Communication Center, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USA.
Department of Communication Studies, University of Puget Sound, Tacoma, WA, USA.
Psychooncology. 2017 Nov;26(11):1872-1880. doi: 10.1002/pon.4253. Epub 2016 Sep 20.
Mother-daughter communication is central to how women adjust to breast cancer. They may be aided by models of healthy communication that illustrate both women's perspectives. Families establish normative communication patterns that inform how they cope. We used family communication patterns theory to examine correlations between openness/avoidance and health. We extended this by capturing mother-daughter open/avoidant narratives to illustrate how these behaviors function in helpful (health-promoting) and unhelpful ways.
Phase 1 of this mixed-method study involved 41 patients and 37 mothers/daughters (N = 78) completing surveys on mother-daughter openness, avoidant coping, and quality of life. Phase 2 involved interviews with 40 patients and 38 mothers/daughters (N = 78) to ascertain what diagnosed women share (or do not share) with their mother/daughter and their reasons.
Diagnosed women reporting more open mother-daughter bonds had better relational health (r = .730, P < .001). Those who engaged in more avoidant coping reported poorer physical health (r = -.431, P = .01). Mothers and daughters talked about treatment side effects and procedures, disease risk and prevention, and medical decisions. They avoided discussions about distressing emotions and topics as well as uncertainty about the future. Motivations to disclose/avoid centered on protecting themselves and/or their mother/daughter. Qualitative findings illustrate the tension between openness and avoidance. Developmental differences and relational role perspectives illustrate women's diverse needs.
A history of openness is linked with relational health, but coping is not as simple as "be open." Both openness/avoidance are helpful and unhelpful depending on age, topic, and responses.
母女沟通是女性适应乳腺癌的核心。健康沟通模式可以为她们提供帮助,展示女性的观点。家庭建立规范的沟通模式,影响着她们的应对方式。我们运用家庭沟通模式理论来检验开放性/回避性与健康之间的相关性。我们进一步通过捕捉母女间的开放/回避叙述来阐明这些行为如何以有益(促进健康)和无益的方式发挥作用。
这项混合方法研究的第一阶段涉及 41 名患者和 37 名母亲/女儿(共 78 名),他们完成了关于母女开放性、回避应对和生活质量的问卷调查。第二阶段涉及对 40 名患者和 38 名母亲/女儿(共 78 名)进行访谈,以确定诊断出的女性与她们的母亲/女儿分享(或不分享)了什么,以及她们的原因。
报告与母亲/女儿关系更开放的被诊断出患有乳腺癌的女性具有更好的人际关系健康(r =.730,P <.001)。那些更多地采用回避应对方式的人报告身体状况较差(r = -.431,P =.01)。母亲和女儿会谈论治疗副作用和程序、疾病风险和预防以及医疗决策。她们避免讨论痛苦的情绪和话题,以及对未来的不确定性。披露/回避的动机集中在保护自己和/或她们的母亲/女儿。定性研究结果说明了开放性和回避性之间的紧张关系。发展差异和关系角色观点说明了女性的多样化需求。
开放性的历史与人际关系健康有关,但应对并不像“保持开放”那么简单。开放性/回避性根据年龄、话题和反应的不同,既有帮助也有帮助。