4.7 Article

A global health model integrating psychological variables involved in cancer through a longitudinal study

Journal

FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 13, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2022.873849

Keywords

cancer; health; stress; coping; psycho-oncology; longitudinal study

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This study provides an integrated and comprehensive perspective on the importance of psychological variables such as coping, resilience, emotional control, social support, affect, and others in cancer patients. The study explores their associations and underlying interactions through a longitudinal study.
ObjectiveThe literature has shown the relevance of certain psychological variables in adjustment to cancer. However, there is a great variability, and these features could be modified through the disease process. The aim of this study is to provide an integrated and global perspective of the importance of variables such as coping, resilience, emotional control, social support, affect, and others in cancer patients through a longitudinal study, with the objective of exploring their associations and underlying interactions. MethodsThe sample was composed of 71 people diagnosed with cancer who were attending psychological support at the Spanish Association Against Cancer (Biscay). We assessed the following variables in two periods of 6 months: perceived stress (PSS), emotional control (CECS), resilience (CD-RISC), coping strategies (CERQ), personality (NEOFFI), social support (MOSS), affect (PANAS), emotional distress (GHQ), quality of life (SF-12) and visual-analogic scales (EVA). ResultsResults showed predictive effects of perceived stress on physical health perception (beta = -0.22; t = -3.26; p = 0.002). Mental health perception was influenced by almost all the psychological variables. Consciousness at baseline (beta(Co) = 0.15; p = 0.003), change in Extraversion (beta(Ex) = 0.16; p = 0.001) and Resilience (beta(Re) = 0.15; p = 0.002) had significant effects on perceived mental health. ConclusionThis study provides a global health model that integrates and explores associations between psychological variables related to cancer disease. This information could be useful for guiding personalized psychotherapeutic interventions, with the aim of increasing adjustment to disease.

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