Ellis Katrina R, Janevic Mary R, Kershaw Trace, Caldwell Cleopatra H, Janz Nancy K, Northouse Laurel
Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina, 302C Rosenau Hall, CB 7440, Chapel Hill, NC, 27559, USA.
School of Public Health, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA.
J Behav Med. 2017 Jun;40(3):506-519. doi: 10.1007/s10865-016-9819-6. Epub 2017 Jan 11.
Diet and exercise are important for the wellbeing of people with cancer and their family caregivers. Unfortunately, little is known about their behaviors over time or factors that may influence their engagement in these behaviors. This exploratory study examined the influence of chronic conditions, symptom distress, and perceived social support on exercise and diet behaviors of patients with advanced cancer and their caregivers using the actor-partner interdependence mediation model (APIMeM) and interdependence theory as guiding frameworks. This secondary analysis uses self-report data from a large RCT (N = 484 patient-caregiver dyads) at three time points: baseline data was collected within three months of the diagnosis, at 3 months post-baseline, and 6 months post-baseline. A number of actor effects were observed: patient and caregiver prior exercise and diet were significant predictors of their own future exercise and diet behaviors; more patient-reported social support was associated with less patient exercise; more patient symptom distress was associated with poorer patient diet; and, more caregiver-reported social support was associated with more caregiver exercise and better caregiver diet. Partner effects were also observed: more patient exercise was positively associated with more caregiver exercise; more patient comorbidities were associated with better caregiver diet; more caregiver-reported social support was associated with better patient diet; and, more patient-reported social support was associated with better caregiver diet. Despite the challenges of advanced cancer and caregiving, past exercise and diet behavior remained a significant predictor of future behavior. Other health problems and perceptions of social support within the dyad may exert a positive or negative influence on patient/caregiver diet and exercise.
饮食和运动对于癌症患者及其家庭照料者的健康至关重要。不幸的是,对于他们长期的行为以及可能影响他们参与这些行为的因素,我们知之甚少。这项探索性研究以行为者-伙伴相互依赖中介模型(APIMeM)和相互依赖理论为指导框架,考察了慢性病、症状困扰和感知到的社会支持对晚期癌症患者及其照料者的运动和饮食行为的影响。这项二次分析使用了来自一项大型随机对照试验(N = 484对患者-照料者二元组)在三个时间点的自我报告数据:基线数据在诊断后的三个月内收集,基线后3个月以及基线后6个月。观察到了一些行为者效应:患者和照料者之前的运动和饮食是他们未来自身运动和饮食行为的重要预测因素;患者报告的社会支持越多,患者的运动就越少;患者的症状困扰越多,患者的饮食就越差;照料者报告的社会支持越多,照料者的运动就越多,饮食也越好。还观察到了伙伴效应:患者运动越多与照料者运动越多呈正相关;患者的合并症越多,照料者的饮食越好;照料者报告的社会支持越多,患者的饮食越好;患者报告的社会支持越多,照料者的饮食越好。尽管晚期癌症和照料存在挑战,但过去的运动和饮食行为仍然是未来行为的重要预测因素。二元组内的其他健康问题和社会支持感知可能会对患者/照料者的饮食和运动产生积极或消极影响。