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Erschienen in: Journal of Behavioral Medicine 6/2017

20.05.2017

Chronic and episodic stress predict physical symptom bother following breast cancer diagnosis

verfasst von: Lauren N. Harris, Margaret R. Bauer, Joshua F. Wiley, Constance Hammen, Jennifer L. Krull, Catherine M. Crespi, Karen L. Weihs, Annette L. Stanton

Erschienen in: Journal of Behavioral Medicine | Ausgabe 6/2017

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Abstract

Breast cancer patients often experience adverse physical side effects of medical treatments. According to the biobehavioral model of cancer stress and disease, life stress during diagnosis and treatment may negatively influence the trajectory of women’s physical health-related adjustment to breast cancer. This longitudinal study examined chronic and episodic stress as predictors of bothersome physical symptoms during the year after breast cancer diagnosis. Women diagnosed with breast cancer in the previous 4 months (N = 460) completed a life stress interview for contextual assessment of chronic and episodic stress severity at study entry and 9 months later. Physical symptom bother (e.g., pain, fatigue) was measured at study entry, every 6 weeks through 6 months, and at nine and 12 months. In multilevel structural equation modeling (MSEM) analyses, both chronic stress and episodic stress occurring shortly after diagnosis predicted greater physical symptom bother over the study period. Episodic stress reported to have occurred prior to diagnosis did not predict symptom bother in MSEM analyses, and the interaction between chronic and episodic stress on symptom bother was not significant. Results suggest that ongoing chronic stress and episodic stress occurring shortly after breast cancer diagnosis are important predictors of bothersome symptoms during and after cancer treatment. Screening for chronic stress and recent stressful life events in the months following diagnosis may help to identify breast cancer patients at risk for persistent and bothersome physical symptoms. Interventions to prevent or ameliorate treatment-related physical symptoms may confer added benefit by addressing ongoing non-cancer-related stress in women’s lives.
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Metadaten
Titel
Chronic and episodic stress predict physical symptom bother following breast cancer diagnosis
verfasst von
Lauren N. Harris
Margaret R. Bauer
Joshua F. Wiley
Constance Hammen
Jennifer L. Krull
Catherine M. Crespi
Karen L. Weihs
Annette L. Stanton
Publikationsdatum
20.05.2017
Verlag
Springer US
Erschienen in
Journal of Behavioral Medicine / Ausgabe 6/2017
Print ISSN: 0160-7715
Elektronische ISSN: 1573-3521
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10865-017-9855-x

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