Associations between faith, distress and mental adjustment – a Danish survivorship study

Authors

  • Christine Tind Johannessen-Henry Unit of Survivorship, Danish Cancer Society Research Center, Copenhagen, Denmark; Department of Systematic Theology, Faculty of Theology, University of Copenhagen, Denmark
  • Isabelle Deltour Unit of Statistics, Bioinformatics and Registry, Danish Cancer Society Research Center, Copenhagen, Denmark
  • Pernille Envold Bidstrup Unit of Survivorship, Danish Cancer Society Research Center, Copenhagen, Denmark
  • Susanne Oksbjerg Dalton Unit of Survivorship, Danish Cancer Society Research Center, Copenhagen, Denmark
  • Christoffer Johansen Unit of Survivorship, Danish Cancer Society Research Center, Copenhagen, Denmark

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3109/0284186X.2012.744141

Abstract

Objective. Several studies have suggested that religion and spirituality are important for overcoming psychological distress and adjusting mentally to cancer, but these studies did not differentiate between spiritual well-being and specific aspects of faith. We examined the extent to which spiritual well-being, the faith dimension of spiritual well-being and aspects of performed faith are associated with distress and mental adjustment among cancer patients. Methods. In a cross-sectional design, 1043 survivors of various cancers filled in a questionnaire on spiritual well-being (FACIT-Sp-12), specific aspects of faith (‘belief in a god’, ‘belief in a god with whom I can talk’ and ‘experiences of god or a higher power’), religious community and church attendance (DUREL), distress (POMS-SF), adjustment to cancer (Mini-MAC) and sociodemographic factors. Linear regression models were used to analyze the associations between exposure (spiritual well-being and specific faith aspects) and outcome (distress and adjustment to cancer) with adjustment for age, gender, cancer diagnosis and physical and social well-being. Results. Higher spiritual well-being was associated with less total distress (β = −0.79, CI −0.92; −0.66) and increased adjustment to cancer (fighting spirit, anxious preoccupation, helplessness-hopelessness). Specific aspects of faith were associated with high confusion-bewilderment and tension-anxiety, but also lower score on vigor-activity, and with higher anxious-preoccupation, both higher and lower cognitive avoidance, but also more fighting spirit. Conclusions. As hypothesized, spiritual well-being were associated with less distress and better mental adjustment. However, specific aspects of faith were both positively and negatively associated with distress and mental adjustment. The results illustrate the complexity of associations between spiritual well-being and specific aspects of faith with psychological function among cancer survivors.

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Published

2013-02-01

How to Cite

Johannessen-Henry, C. T., Deltour, I., Envold Bidstrup, P., Oksbjerg Dalton, S., & Johansen, C. (2013). Associations between faith, distress and mental adjustment – a Danish survivorship study. Acta Oncologica, 52(2), 364–371. https://doi.org/10.3109/0284186X.2012.744141