Li Xiaoru, Zhu Yu, Wan Hongwei
Department of Nursing, Shanghai Proton and Heavy Ion Center, Fudan University Cancer Hospital, Shanghai, China.
Shanghai Key Laboratory of Radiation Oncology, Shanghai Proton Heavy Ion Hospital, Shanghai, China.
Front Psychiatry. 2025 Jan 17;15:1488196. doi: 10.3389/fpsyt.2024.1488196. eCollection 2024.
Patients with head and neck tumors undergoing radiotherapy are burdened with a variety of disease-related stressors that may affect their family adaptability. The aim of the present study was to investigate the relationship between perceived stress and family adaptability in patients with head and neck tumors and to analyze whether social support and family resilience play a mediating role in this relationship.
The convenience sample approach was utilized to recruit 316 patients with head and neck tumors who received radiation. Self-developed general information questionnaires, the Chinese Perceived Stress Scales, Social Support Rating Scale, the Shortened Chinese Version of the Family Resilience Assessment Scale, and Family Adaptability Scale were used to collect data. Bootstrap methods to analyze independent and chained mediation effects between variables.
The research participants had a mean age of 43.63 ± 12.78 years, were mostly male (61.7%), married (85.8%), had a university education (51.6%), were uninsured (50.9%), had ear, nose, and throat tumors (56.3%), and had an illness duration of 1-6 months (43.4%). The findings of the chain mediation effect research indicate that the direct negative effect of perceived stress on family adaptability (-0.163) accounted for 45.63% of the overall effect (-0.355), while the indirect effect (-0.194) accounted for 54.37%. Perceived stress independently mediated family adaptability through social support (effect: -0.062) and family resilience (effect: -0.080), with the independent mediator effect accounting for 32.12% and 41.45% of the indirect effect, respectively, and chain-mediated mediation of social support and family resilience, with the chain effect (-0.051) accounting for 31.30%.
Perceived stress in patients with head and neck cancer receiving radiotherapy directly or indirectly negatively affects family adaptability. Clinical staff should meet the patient's health care service needs while also utilizing the family's internal and external resources to reduce disease-related stress and improve family adaptability.
接受放疗的头颈部肿瘤患者承受着各种与疾病相关的压力源,这些压力源可能会影响其家庭适应性。本研究旨在探讨头颈部肿瘤患者感知压力与家庭适应性之间的关系,并分析社会支持和家庭复原力在这种关系中是否起中介作用。
采用便利抽样法招募316例接受放疗的头颈部肿瘤患者。使用自行编制的一般信息问卷、中国感知压力量表、社会支持评定量表、家庭复原力评估量表简版和家庭适应性量表收集数据。采用Bootstrap方法分析变量之间的独立和链式中介效应。
研究参与者的平均年龄为43.63±12.78岁,大多数为男性(61.7%),已婚(85.8%),具有大学学历(51.6%),未参保(50.9%),患有耳鼻喉肿瘤(56.3%),病程为1 - 6个月(43.4%)。链式中介效应研究结果表明,感知压力对家庭适应性的直接负效应(-0.163)占总效应(-0.355)的45.63%,而间接效应(-0.194)占54.37%。感知压力通过社会支持(效应:-0.062)和家庭复原力(效应:-0.080)独立中介家庭适应性,独立中介效应分别占间接效应的32.12%和41.45%,社会支持和家庭复原力的链式中介效应,链式效应(-0.051)占31.30%。
接受放疗的头颈部癌症患者的感知压力直接或间接对家庭适应性产生负面影响。临床工作人员应满足患者的医疗服务需求,同时利用家庭的内部和外部资源,以减轻与疾病相关的压力,提高家庭适应性。