U bent hier

Artikel 'The role of posttraumatic growth and timing of quitting smoking as moderators of the relationship between stigma and psychological distress among lung cancer survivors who are former smokers' (2015)

Objective: Patients diagnosed with lung cancer report high levels of stigma and psychological distress. This study examined posttraumatic growth among lung cancer survivors as a potential buffer against this relationship between stigma and psychological distress and examined how these relationships differed by the timing of quitting smoking (pre versus post-diagnosis).

Methods: Stages IA and IB non-small-cell lung cancer survivors (N=141) who were former smokers, 1–6 years post-treatment, and had no evidence of disease completed standardized questionnaires assessing stigma, posttraumatic growth, timing of quitting smoking history, and psychological distress.

Results: Hierarchical linear regression and simple slope analyses indicated that among those who quit smoking prior to diagnosis (pre-diagnosis quitters), stigma had a positive association with psycho-logical distress at highlevels of posttraumatic growth (p=0.003) and had a positive (butnon-significant) association with psychological distress among those with low levels of posttraumatic growth (p=0.167).
Among those who quit smoking after diagnosis (post-diagnosis quitters), stigma had a positive association with psychological distress among those with low levels of posttraumatic growth (p=0.004) but had
no relationship among those with high levels of posttraumatic growth (p=0.880).

Conclusions: Findings indicate that posttraumatic growth buffers against the negative effects of stigma on psychological distress but only among post-diagnosis quitters. Future interventions could
focus on fostering posttraumatic growth as a way to decrease the negative effects of stigma.

Auteur: 
Megan Johnson Shen , Elliot J. Coups, Yuelin Li et al
X

Op de hoogte blijven van ons nieuws, onze artikels en opleidingen? Schrijf je snel in voor onze nieuwsbrief!