OBJECTIVE: To examine: (1) daily religious and spiritual experiences among localized prostate cancer patients as compared to a national age and race-matched male sample; (2) cognitive-affective and clinical predictors of prostate cancer diagnosis-related increases in religiosity and spirituality; (3) short-term impact of daily religious and spiritual experiences on cancer recurrence worry. METHODS: Analyses of data from a longitudinal questionnaire study among patients (N = 254) diagnosed with localized prostate cancer and data from a random sample (N = 238) of respondents to the national General Social Survey. RESULTS: Compared to the national sample, prostate cancer patients reported higher levels of daily spiritual experiences. Patients with higher worry about prostate cancer and elevated levels of prostate-related symptoms around diagnosis were more likely to report a diagnosis-related increase in religiosity and spirituality. Positive benefits (reduced recurrence worry) of religious coping/practices were restricted to those patients with higher versus lower level of postdiagnosis increase in religiosity; patients not reporting postdiagnosis increases in religion who are not engaging in religious coping/practice adjusted equally well. Results suggest that the development of religious/spiritual interventions is premature. SIGNIFICANCE OF RESULTS: This is the first prospective study to report on the prevalence and influence of daily spiritual and religious experiences among prostate cancer patients.
OBJECTIVE: To examine: (1) daily religious and spiritual experiences among localized prostate cancerpatients as compared to a national age and race-matched male sample; (2) cognitive-affective and clinical predictors of prostate cancer diagnosis-related increases in religiosity and spirituality; (3) short-term impact of daily religious and spiritual experiences on cancer recurrence worry. METHODS: Analyses of data from a longitudinal questionnaire study among patients (N = 254) diagnosed with localized prostate cancer and data from a random sample (N = 238) of respondents to the national General Social Survey. RESULTS: Compared to the national sample, prostate cancerpatients reported higher levels of daily spiritual experiences. Patients with higher worry about prostate cancer and elevated levels of prostate-related symptoms around diagnosis were more likely to report a diagnosis-related increase in religiosity and spirituality. Positive benefits (reduced recurrence worry) of religious coping/practices were restricted to those patients with higher versus lower level of postdiagnosis increase in religiosity; patients not reporting postdiagnosis increases in religion who are not engaging in religious coping/practice adjusted equally well. Results suggest that the development of religious/spiritual interventions is premature. SIGNIFICANCE OF RESULTS: This is the first prospective study to report on the prevalence and influence of daily spiritual and religious experiences among prostate cancerpatients.
Authors: Patricia G Moorman; Nadine J Barrett; Frances Wang; J Anthony Alberg; Elisa V Bandera; J B Barnholtz-Sloan; Melissa Bondy; Michele L Cote; Ellen Funkhouser; Linda E Kelemen; Lauren C Peres; Edwards S Peters; A G Schwartz; Paul D Terry; Sydnee Crankshaw; Sarah E Abbott; Joellen M Schildkraut Journal: J Womens Health (Larchmt) Date: 2018-11-27 Impact factor: 2.681