Understanding the roles of patient symptoms and subjective appraisals in well-being among breast cancer patients.

Autor: Badana, Adrian N. S., Marino, Victoria R., Templeman, Maureen E., McMillan, Susan C., Tofthagen, Cindy S., Small, Brent J., Haley, William E.
Předmět:
Zdroj: Supportive Care in Cancer; Nov2019, Vol. 27 Issue 11, p4245-4252, 8p
Abstrakt: Purpose: To examine the roles of both patient symptoms, and subjective appraisals of stress (self-efficacy, symptom barriers, symptom distress), in understanding well-being (anxiety, depression, cancer-specific quality of life, mental health quality of life, and physical health quality of life) in breast cancer patients.Methods: We examined data from 104 female breast cancer patients. Using a stress process model, we hypothesized that while high levels of patient symptoms would be associated with poorer patient well-being, these effects would be mediated by subjective appraisals, including patient self-efficacy, perceived symptom barriers, and symptom distress.Results: As expected, higher levels of patient symptoms were associated with poorer well-being on all five indicators. Subjective appraisals of stress added significantly to predictors of well-being, and were mediators of this relationship across all five outcomes.Conclusions: While patient symptoms are important predictors of patient well-being, subjective appraisals of the stressfulness of symptoms, and of patients' self-efficacy in managing symptoms, are also key factors. The findings suggest the utility of a stress process model in understanding well-being in breast cancer patients, and point to the potential value of targeting patient appraisals as well as symptoms to improve psychological well-being and quality of life. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index