Journal
HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 25, Issue 2, Pages 181-189Publisher
AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1037/0278-6133.25.2.181
Keywords
emotional disclosure; benefit finding; expressive writing; breast cancer
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A randomized trial (n = 60; A. L. Stanton, S. Danoff-Burg, L. A. Sworowski, et al., 2002) revealed that 4 sessions of written expressive disclosure or benefit finding produced lower physical symptom reports and medical appointments for cancer-related morbidities at 3-month follow-up among breast cancer patients relative to a fact-control condition. The goal of this article is to investigate mechanisms underlying these effects. Within-session heart rate habituation mediated effects of expressive disclosure on physical symptoms, and greater use of negative emotion words in essays predicted a decline in physical symptoms. Postwriting mood and use of positive emotion and cognitive mechanism words in essays were not significant mediators, although greater cognitive mechanism word use was related to greater heart rate habituation and negative emotion word use.
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