Department of Psychology, Bar-Ilan University, Ramat-Gan, Israel.
The School of Behavioral Sciences, The Academic College of Tel-Aviv-Yaffo, Tel-Aviv-Yaffo, Israel.
Psychooncology. 2018 Feb;27(2):583-589. doi: 10.1002/pon.4552. Epub 2017 Sep 21.
Contextual self-concealment in the psychooncology literature has been found to be associated with elevated distress. The current study aimed to understand the dyadic relationships of an individual's perception of spousal support and dispositional perspective-taking with own and partner's levels of self-concealment behavior, among couples coping with cancer.
A subsample of 61 heterosexual couples coping with cancer was taken from a large-scale cross-sectional study. Patients and their spouses independently completed measures of perceived spousal support, perspective-taking, and contextual self-concealment. Dyadic data were analyzed by using the actor-partner interdependence model both for couples in which the woman was the patient and also for couples in which the man was the patient.
Perceived spousal support negatively predicted contextual self-concealment, regardless of gender and role. Implications of perspective-taking for concealment behavior were dependent on role and gender. A female patient's perspective-taking was associated with a reduction in her own and her spouse's concealment behavior. A male spouse's perspective-taking was associated with an increase in his own and his spouse's concealment behavior. A female spouse's perspective-taking negatively predicted patient's concealment behavior, but not her own.
Findings stress the important roles played by spousal support and perspective-taking in communication patterns between couples affected by cancer. Although the perception of support from one's spouse seems to reduce the need to conceal cancer-related issues, interventions that focus on couples' communication should address the differential implications of perspective-taking, as they can lead to either more or less self-concealment among couples, depending on role and gender.
在心理肿瘤学文献中发现,情境自我掩饰与情绪困扰有关。本研究旨在了解夫妻双方对配偶支持的感知和性格换位思考与个体和伴侣自我掩饰行为之间的关系,研究对象为正在应对癌症的夫妻。
从一项大规模横断面研究中抽取了 61 对正在应对癌症的异性夫妻作为子样本。患者及其配偶分别独立完成配偶支持感知、换位思考和情境自我掩饰的测量。使用演员-伙伴相互依存模型分析夫妻双方的数据,包括女性为患者和男性为患者的夫妻。
无论性别和角色如何,配偶支持感知均与情境自我掩饰呈负相关。换位思考对掩饰行为的影响取决于角色和性别。女性患者的换位思考与她自己和配偶的掩饰行为减少有关。男性配偶的换位思考与他自己和配偶的掩饰行为增加有关。女性配偶的换位思考与患者的掩饰行为呈负相关,但与她自己的掩饰行为无关。
研究结果强调了配偶支持和换位思考在癌症影响的夫妻沟通模式中所起的重要作用。虽然配偶的支持感知似乎减少了掩饰与癌症相关问题的需求,但关注夫妻沟通的干预措施应考虑换位思考的不同影响,因为这会导致夫妻双方的自我掩饰行为增加或减少,具体取决于角色和性别。