| Literature DB >> 28101071 |
Cecilia C Schiavon1, Eduarda Marchetti1, Léia G Gurgel1, Fernanda M Busnello1, Caroline T Reppold1.
Abstract
There is a growing recognition that positive psychological functioning (which includes constructs such as optimism and hope) influences health. However, the understanding of these underlying mechanisms in relation to health is limited. Therefore, this review sought to identify what the scientific literature says about the influence of optimism and hope on chronic disease treatment. A search was conducted in the PsycINFO, Scopus, Pubmed, and Web of Science databases using the indexing terms optimism, hope, chronic diseases, randomized controlled trial, and treatment between 1998 and 2015. In the articles, we identified the most studied diseases in context, the assessment instruments used, the participant characteristics investigated, the results found, and the publication dates. From our analysis of the articles that met our inclusion criteria, it appears that the study of these constructs is recent and there is evidence that individuals with greater optimism and hope seek to engage in healthier behaviors, regardless of their clinical status, and that this contributes to chronic disease treatment. More research is needed so that targeted interventions can be carried out effectively in chronic disease treatment.Entities:
Keywords: chronic disease; hope; optimism; randomized controlled trial; therapy
Year: 2017 PMID: 28101071 PMCID: PMC5209342 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2016.02022
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Figure 1Flow chart of included and excluded studies.
Randomized controlled trials.
| Giltay et al., | Cardiovascular disease | Randomized controlled trials | Optimism | Dutch scale of subjective and well-being for older persons, with a subscale for optimism | ( | There is a relationship of graduated and independent protection between dispositional optimism and all causes of mortality in old age |
| Matthews et al., | Carotid atherosclerosis | Randomized controlled trials | Optimism | Life Orientation Test (LOT, Scheier and Carver, | ( | Optimistic women are less likely to show progression of carotid artery disease in middle age than pessimistic women |
| Hart et al., | Multiple sclerosis | Randomized controlled trials | Optimism | The Life Orientation Test-Revised (LOT-R; Scheier et al., | ( | Optimism helps people to achieve their life objectives, even in the face of difficulties. Increased optimism is a mechanism that appears to assist multiple sclerosis patients in increasing their benefits over time |
| Geers et al., | Pain tolerance, vascular response, and pulse excitability | Randomized controlled trials | Optimism | The Life Orientation Test-Revised (LOT-R; Scheier et al., | ( | Optimism was associated with lower pain classifications in the placebo condition |
| Saquib et al., | Breast cancer | Randomized controlled trials | Optimism | The Life Orientation Test-Revised (LOT-R; Scheier et al., | ( | Optimism is not associated with breast cancer or death from all causes in the multivariate analysis |
| Boehm et al., | Hypertension, stroke, diabetes, and heart disease | Randomized controlled trials | Optimism | The Life Orientation Test (LOT, Scheier and Carver, | ( | Optimism is associated with healthier lipid profiles (higher HDL levels and lower triglyceride levels) |
| Richman et al., | Hypertension, diabetes mellitus, and respiratory tract infections | Randomized controlled trials | Hope | Emotion Scale (Ellsworth and Smith, | ( | Higher levels of hope are associated with a decline in probability of having or developing a disease |
| Warber et al., | Coronary syndrome | Randomized controlled trials | Hope | Hope Scale (Snyder et al., | ( | Hope is inversely correlated to stress and depression. An association was also observed between hope and positive cardiovascular outcomes |
| Gelkopf et al., | Chronic combat-related post-traumatic stress | Randomized controlled trials | Hope | Hope Scale (Snyder et al., | ( | This study's results suggest that the 1-year NAR intervention leads to significant improvements in daily functioning and hope |
Other designs.
| Shepperd et al., | Heart disease | Longitudinal study | Optimism | Life Orientation Test (LOT; Scheier and Carver, | ( | Optimism measured at the beginning of the program was associated with greater success in achieving lower saturated fat, body fat, and overall coronary risk levels as well as greater success in increasing aerobic capacity by the end of the program |
| Scheier et al., | Coronary artery bypass surgery | Prospective cohort study | Optimism | Life Orientation Test-Revised (LOT-R; Scheier et al., | ( | Optimistic people were significantly less likely to be hospitalized again for a wide range of aggregated problems |
| Kubzansky et al., | Heart disease | Longitudinal cohort study | Optimism | Optimism–Pessimism Scale | ( | An optimistic outlook can protect against coronary heart disease risk in older men |
| Kubzansky et al., | Chronic airway obstruction | Prospective cohort study | Optimism | Revised Optimism-Pessimism Scale (PSM–R-Malinchoc et al., | ( | Optimism is linked to higher pulmonary function levels and lower rates of pulmonary function decline in older men—a protective effect, regardless of smoking habits |
| Allison et al., | Head and neck cancer | Prospective cohort study | Optimism | French version of the Life Orientation Test | ( | Optimism provides 1 year of survival independent of other socio-demographic and clinical variables |
| Urcuyo et al., | Breast cancer | Cross-sectional study | Optimism | Life Orientation Test-Revised (LOT-R; (Scheier et al., | ( | Benefits to the condition were related to a disposition to be optimistic about life |
| Pinquart et al., | Cancer | Cross-sectional study | Optimism | The Life Orientation Test (LOT, Scheier and Carver, | ( | Optimistic cancer patients may interpret their illness less negatively, put negative feelings aside, better manage stressors, focus on ways to deal with problems and may therefore suffer fewer negative changes |
| Bargiel-Matusiewicz and Krzyszkowska, | Rheumatoid arthritis, back pain, or neuropathy | Cross-sectional study | Optimism | The Life Orientation Test-Revised (LOT-R; Scheier et al., | ( | A highly optimistic life orientation was related positively with pain control variables and negatively with catastrophic attitudes |
| Flett et al., | Crohn's Disease and ulcerative colitis | Cross-sectional study | Optimism | Life Orientation Test (Scheier and Carver, | ( | Higher levels of optimism were associated with lower levels of perfectionism. Thus, optimistic people generally did not use emotional worry or maladaptive attitudes in relation to chronic diseases |
| Johnson et al., | HIV | Prospective longitudinal study | Hope | Beck Hope Scale (BHS; Beck et al., | ( | In HIV-positive people, an increase in hopelessness predicted an increase in depression after controlling for social support |
| Hartley et al., | Knee and hip replacement surgery | Longitudinal study | Hope | Hope Scale (Snyder et al., | ( | Hope is a significant predictor of pre-surgical depression but is not predictive of depression or functional ability after surgery |
| Kortte et al., | Spinal cord injury | Prospective study | Hope | Hope Scale (Snyder et al., | ( | There was a link between hope and greater life satisfaction during the initial period of acute rehabilitation |
| Kortte et al., | Spinal cord dysfunction, stroke, amputation or orthopedic surgery recovery | Longitudinal study | Hope | Hope Scale (Snyder et al., | ( | Interventions aimed at increasing the hope of individuals can be useful for increasing participation in improved outcomes following an acute medical rehabilitation |
| Halding and Heggdal, | Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease | Qualitative study | Hope | Thirty-six individual qualitative interviews | ( | During rehabilitation, knowledge of opportunities for health and well-being, engagement in self-management and hope for the future were strengthened, as well as healthy life transitions |
| Waynor et al., | Mental illness | Cross-sectional study | Hope | The State Hope Scale (SHS; Snyder et al., | ( | Hope and symptoms are inversely related |
| Hawro et al., | Psoriasis | Cross-sectional study | Hope | Basic Hope Inventory (Trzebiński and Zięba, | ( | Higher levels of hope are correlated with better life quality |
| Scioli et al., | Chronic disease, general health | Prospective cohort study | Optimism and hope | Life Orientation Test (LOT, Scheier and Carver, | ( | Less optimism is correlated to reports of more severe disease 10 weeks later. Less hope is correlated with a higher incidence of disease and reports of greater severity of total diseases |
| Hou et al., | Cancer | Prospective cohort study | Optimism and hope | Chinese version of the Life Orientation Test and the Hope Scale | ( | Maintenance or adoption of optimistic personalities is associated with recovery from emotional anguish and preservation of resilience |
| Schöllgen et al., | General chronic disease | Cross-sectional study | Optimism and hope | Hope Scale (Snyder et al., | ( | Psychological resources positively affected health in all groups |
| Lopez-Vargas et al., | Chronic kidney disease | Focus group | Optimism and hope | Focus group | ( | Optimism and a positive perspective on life and its circumstances enabled the patients to deal with their disease and take full advantage of their lives |
Methodological quality of the studies included with randomized clinical design.
| Giltay et al., | A | I | I | A | I | A |
| Matthews et al., | A | I | I | A | A | I |
| Hart et al., | A | A | A | A | A | A |
| Geers et al., | A | A | I | A | I | I |
| Saquib et al., | A | I | I | A | I | I |
| Boehm et al., | A | I | I | I | I | A |
| Richman et al., | A | I | I | I | I | A |
| Warber et al., | A | A | A | A | I | I |
| Gelkopf et al., | A | I | A | A | I | A |
A - Adequate; I- Inadequate.