| Literature DB >> 30778323 |
Cristian Ochoa Arnedo1,2,3, Nuria Sánchez4, Enric C Sumalla1, Anna Casellas-Grau1,2.
Abstract
Post-traumatic stress and growth are common responses to adverse life events such as cancer. In this article, we establish how cancer becomes a "fertile land" for the emergence of stress and growth responses and analyze the main mechanisms involved. Stress-growth responses on adjusting to cancer is potentially determined by factors like the phase of the illness (e.g., initial phases vs. period of survivorship), patient's coping strategies, meaning-making, and relationships with significant others. We also review the mechanisms of constructive and adaptative stress-growth balances in cancer to study the predictors, interrelated associations, triggering mechanisms, long-term results, and specific trajectories of these two responses to cancer. Finally, we update the evidence on the role of these stress-growth associations in psychologically adjusting to cancer. Together with this evidence, we summarize preliminary results regarding the efficacy of psychotherapeutic interventions that aim to facilitate a constructive psychological balance between stress and growth in cancer patients. Recommendations for future research and gaps in knowledge on stress-growth processes in this illness are also highlighted. Researchers are encouraged to design and use psychotherapeutic interventions according to the dynamic and changeable patients' sources of stress and growth along the illness. Relevant insights are proposed to understand the inconsistency of stress-growth literature and to promote psychotherapeutic interventions to facilitate a constructive balance between these key responses in cancer.Entities:
Keywords: cancer; oncology; post-traumatic growth; post-traumatic stress; psychotherapy; secondary growth; vicarious growth
Year: 2019 PMID: 30778323 PMCID: PMC6369350 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2019.00177
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Cancer characteristics and stress-growth responses.
| Cancer characteristics/responses | Stress-Trauma response (negative changes) | Growth response (positive changes) |
|---|---|---|
| Internal source (body) | Body hypervigilance and alert (health anxiety). | Self-care and adoption of healthy lifestyles. |
| Future perception of threat | Feeling of limited future. | Change of life priorities and greater appreciation for life. |
| Permanent, undefined threat (complexity) | Ongoing threat, existential trouble and | Maintenance of structural identity changes. |
| Perceived control | Guilt and shame. | Responsibility and involvement in the process (adherence to treatment). |
| Invalidating sequels | Incomprehension, loneliness, alienation. | Need for others, gratitude, closeness and openness. |
Distinction between secondary and vicarious stress/growth responses.
| Cancer survivors/significant others | Secondary posttraumatic stress/growth | Vicarious posttraumatic stress/growth |
|---|---|---|
| Does the significant other’s stress/growth result in definitive changes in their life? | This is a primary stress/growth and is more significant than for the survivor. | The degree of stress/growth is the same as for the survivor. |
| Who initiates and generates the stress/growth responses? | They are initiated by the significant other and how the fact challenges their identity. | They are initiated by the survivor’s PTG, which predicts, drives or affects the significant other’s PTG. |
| Are there asymmetrical processes of stress/growth transmission? | Stress and growth are parallel or symmetrical. The significant other’s stress and growth may be greater than the survivor’s. | Asymmetrical. From the survivor to the significant other, through observational, relational, modeling, transmission or imitation learning. |
| Are the sources and dimensions of stress/growth similar or different? Is there harmony and synchrony within the answers? | No. As they are independent processes, stress and growth may arise for different reasons and in non-shared dimensions. | Yes. Stress/growth arises from similar sources and dimensions. There is harmony and synchrony in the answers. |
| Importance of relational and family variables | They are not important. Stress/growth responses are autonomous and independent, and so are essentially an intrapersonal process. | They are the basis of the significant other’s stress/growth. These variables predict and mediate the changes in both the significant other and the survivor, as growth is an essentially interpersonal process. |