1Division of Cancer Control and Population Sciences, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, Maryland.
2Department of Community Health Sciences, Boston University School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts.
J Womens Health (Larchmt). 2019 Aug;28(8):1023-1030. doi: 10.1089/jwh.2018.6940. Epub 2018 Aug 21.
We tested a theoretical framework to explain differences in coping responses to breast cancer between lesbian and heterosexual women. Breast cancer survivors were recruited through cancer registries and community-based sampling. Cross-sectional telephone surveys were completed among self-identified lesbian ( = 330) and heterosexual ( = 595) women who were diagnosed with breast cancer. Five subscales from the Mini-Mental Adjustment to Cancer (Mini-MAC) Scale were used to measure coping with breast cancer among women post-treatment. Mediation analysis was used to examine the explanatory power of life course factors (, parenting and education) in explicating the association between sexual identity and coping responses. Lesbian women had lower mean scores on the anxious preoccupation and cognitive avoidance subscales ( < 0.05). These differences were moderated by age at diagnosis, with differences in anxious preoccupation and cognitive avoidance greater among women diagnosed with breast cancer before 45 years of age. Having children mediated the association between lesbian identity and anxious preoccupation, but only among women diagnosed at younger ages. College education mediated the association between lesbian identity and cognitive avoidance among women diagnosed at older ages. Despite previous evidence of suboptimal cancer care and gaps in supportive services, lesbian women with breast cancer demonstrate adaptive coping. This study calls for an increased focus on life course factors, both in the empirical and theoretical literature, which may partially explain some of this resiliency. Identifying mechanisms that lead to active coping can inform supportive care for both lesbian and heterosexual women.
我们测试了一个理论框架,以解释女同性恋和异性恋女性在应对乳腺癌方面的差异。通过癌症登记处和基于社区的抽样方法招募乳腺癌幸存者。在确诊乳腺癌后,对自我认同为女同性恋( = 330)和异性恋( = 595)的女性进行了横断面电话调查。使用迷你心理应对癌症量表(Mini-MAC)的五个分量表来衡量女性在乳腺癌治疗后的应对方式。中介分析用于检验生活经历因素(育儿和教育)在解释性身份与应对反应之间关联的解释力。女同性恋者在焦虑关注和认知回避分量表上的平均得分较低( < 0.05)。这些差异受诊断时年龄的调节,在 45 岁之前被诊断出患有乳腺癌的女性中,焦虑关注和认知回避的差异更大。有孩子调节了女同性恋身份与焦虑关注之间的关联,但仅在年龄较小的女性中如此。高等教育调节了女同性恋身份与认知回避之间的关联,仅在年龄较大的女性中如此。尽管之前有证据表明癌症护理不佳和支持性服务存在差距,但患有乳腺癌的女同性恋者表现出适应性应对。这项研究呼吁更多地关注生活经历因素,无论是在实证文献还是理论文献中,这可能部分解释了这种弹性。确定导致积极应对的机制可以为女同性恋和异性恋女性提供支持性护理。