Department of Medicine, Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, Section of Population Science, Rutgers Cancer Institute of New Jersey, New Brunswick, NJ, USA.
Department of Psychology, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI, USA.
Transl Behav Med. 2019 Jul 16;9(4):682-692. doi: 10.1093/tbm/iby087.
Perceived unsupportive responses from close others play an important role in psychological adaptation of patients with cancer. Little is known about whether these negative responses change after someone experiences a serious life event, and even less is known about the individual characteristics and related factors that might contribute to both the levels of and changes in perceived unsupportive responses over the course of adaptation to an experience. This longitudinal study aimed to evaluate changes in perceived unsupportive behavior from family and friends among women newly with gynecologic cancer as well as initial demographic, disease, and psychological factors that predict the course of perceived unsupportive behavior over time. Women (N = 125) assigned to the usual care arm of a randomized clinical trial comparing a coping and communication intervention with a supportive counseling intervention to usual care completed six surveys over an 18 month period. Growth models using multilevel modeling were used to predict unsupportive responses over time. Average levels of perceived unsupportive responses from family and friends were low. Unsupportive responses varied from patient to patient, but patients did not report a systematic change in perceived unsupportive responses over time. Cultivating meaning and peace and coping efficacy were associated with fewer perceived unsupportive responses as well as reductions in perceived unsupportive responses over time. Emotional distress, cancer concerns, functional impairment, holding back sharing concerns, and cognitive and behavioral avoidance predicted higher perceived unsupportive responses over time. The findings are discussed in terms of the self-presentation theory and social network responses to persons undergoing difficult life events.
亲近的人给予的不支持性回应在癌症患者的心理适应中起着重要作用。目前尚不清楚这些负面回应在某人经历严重生活事件后是否会发生变化,更不知道哪些个体特征和相关因素可能会导致适应过程中对不支持性回应的感知水平和变化。本纵向研究旨在评估妇科癌症新发病例的女性从家人和朋友那里感知到的不支持性行为的变化,以及最初的人口统计学、疾病和心理因素,这些因素可以预测随着时间的推移感知到的不支持性行为的变化过程。被分配到比较应对和沟通干预与支持性咨询干预与常规护理的随机临床试验常规护理组的 125 名女性完成了 6 项调查,历时 18 个月。使用多层次建模的增长模型来预测随时间推移的不支持性反应。家人和朋友感知到的不支持性反应的平均水平较低。不支持性反应因患者而异,但患者并没有报告随时间推移感知到的不支持性反应的系统性变化。培养意义和安宁以及应对效能与较少的感知不支持性反应以及随时间推移感知不支持性反应的减少有关。情绪困扰、癌症担忧、功能障碍、抑制分享关注以及认知和行为回避预测随时间推移感知到的不支持性反应更高。研究结果从自我呈现理论和社会网络对经历困难生活事件的人的反应的角度进行了讨论。