Coping, Psychosocial Well-Being and Anxiety in Cancer Patients at Follow-up Visits

Authors

  • Claudia Lampic Centre for Caring Sciences, University of Uppsala, Uppsala, Sweden
  • Annika Wennberg Centre for Caring Sciences, University of Uppsala, Uppsala, Sweden
  • Jan-Erik Schill Department of Clinical Psychology, University of Uppsala, Uppsala, Sweden
  • Bengt Glimelius Department of Oncology, University Hospital, Uppsala, Sweden
  • Ola Brodin Department of Oncology, University Hospital, Uppsala, Sweden
  • Per-Olow Sjödén Centre for Caring Sciences, University of Uppsala, Uppsala, Sweden

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3109/02841869409098451

Abstract

Coping, psychosocial well-being, situation-specific anxiety and cancer-related worry were assessed in 197 consecutive cancer patients attending follow-up visits. Participants completed questionnaires on three occasions: at the follow-up visit, some days later (n = 175) and three weeks later (n = 125). High levels of coping styles ‘Anxious Preoccupation’ and ‘Helplessness/Hopelessness’ were associated with low levels of psychosocial well-being, more situation-specific anxiety and more cancer-related worry. High levels of ‘Fighting Spirit’ and ‘Fatalistic’ were found to be associated with high psychosocial well-being and, for ‘Fighting Spirit’, also with less cancer-related worry. Patients with a ‘dismal’ prognosis were found to have higher levels of ‘Helplessness/Hopelessness’ than patients with a more ‘favorable’ prognosis. Clinical implications of these findings are discussed.

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Published

1994-01-01

How to Cite

Lampic, C., Wennberg, A. ., Schill, J.-E. ., Glimelius, B. ., Brodin, O. ., & Sjödén, P.-O. . (1994). Coping, Psychosocial Well-Being and Anxiety in Cancer Patients at Follow-up Visits. Acta Oncologica, 33(8), 887–894. https://doi.org/10.3109/02841869409098451