Literature DB >> 19090497

Adaptation process and psychosocial resources of Chinese colorectal cancer patients undergoing adjuvant treatment: a qualitative analysis.

Wai Kai Hou1, Wendy W T Lam, Richard Fielding.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To examine how Chinese patients with colorectal cancer (CRC) dynamically adapt to diagnosis and treatment and explore how patients evolve and deploy different resources throughout the illness trajectory.
METHODS: Semi-structured interviews were conducted on a purposive sample of 16 histologically diagnosed Chinese CRC patients about to complete or who had very recently completed all treatment without recurrence. Recorded interviews were transcribed verbatim and analyzed by using grounded theory techniques.
RESULTS: Three major adaptation-related themes were identified: (1) utilization of medical resources, (2) transition of resource utilization, and (3) continuous resistance to demands. Initial prevailing fatalistic views of diagnosis associated predominantly with frequent medical surveillance and with respondents' weighting of treatment and expertise of medical professionals. As treatment progressed, there was a shift toward reliance on personal and social resources to field cancer-related demands concurrent with a gradual distancing from medical care. Upon treatment completion, fatalism re-emerged regarding disease recurrence, which, like diagnosis, was seen as not amenable to individual control, even with close adherence to medical follow-ups and dietary adjustment. Maintaining positive states of mind and good relationships with family and friends were cores strategies respondents adopted to preserve psychological well-being.
CONCLUSIONS: Maintenance and enhancement of personal and social resources throughout the CRC trajectory may have considerably more utility than traditional descriptive studies hitherto suggested. Considering personal and social resources within dynamic rather than static models could avoid the pitfall of attributing maladaptive responses to initial dispositions and socioeconomic conditions that are seemingly unalterable and enduring over time.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19090497     DOI: 10.1002/pon.1457

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychooncology        ISSN: 1057-9249            Impact factor:   3.894


  5 in total

1.  Resilience in the year after cancer diagnosis: a cross-lagged panel analysis of the reciprocity between psychological distress and well-being.

Authors:  Wai Kai Hou; John Hiu Ming Lam
Journal:  J Behav Med       Date:  2013-02-20

2.  Resilience and psychosocial adjustment in digestive system cancer.

Authors:  Julia Gouzman; Miri Cohen; Hasida Ben-Zur; Einat Shacham-Shmueli; Dan Aderka; Nava Siegelmann-Danieli; Alex Beny
Journal:  J Clin Psychol Med Settings       Date:  2015-03

3.  Chinese Livery Drivers' Perspectives on Adapting a Community Health Worker Intervention to Facilitate Lung Cancer Screening.

Authors:  Jennifer Leng; Florence Lui; Francesca Gany
Journal:  J Health Care Poor Underserved       Date:  2022

4.  Specificity may count: not every aspect of coping self-efficacy is beneficial to quality of life among Chinese cancer survivors in China.

Authors:  Nelson C Y Yeung; Qian Lu; Wenjuan Lin
Journal:  Int J Behav Med       Date:  2014-08

5.  Intrapersonal and interpersonal dimensions of cancer perception: a confirmatory factor analysis of the cancer experience and efficacy scale (CEES).

Authors:  Wai Kai Hou
Journal:  Support Care Cancer       Date:  2009-07-09       Impact factor: 3.603

  5 in total

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