Process of Coping With Radiation Therapy

Evaluated the ability of self-regulation and emotional-drive theories to explain effects of an informational intervention entailing descriptions of the experience in concrete objective terms on outcomes of coping with radiation therapy (RT) in men ( N = 84) with prostate cancer. The experimental gro...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of consulting and clinical psychology 1989-06, Vol.57 (3), p.358-364
Hauptverfasser: Johnson, Jean E, Lauver, Diane R, Nail, Lillian M
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container_title Journal of consulting and clinical psychology
container_volume 57
creator Johnson, Jean E
Lauver, Diane R
Nail, Lillian M
description Evaluated the ability of self-regulation and emotional-drive theories to explain effects of an informational intervention entailing descriptions of the experience in concrete objective terms on outcomes of coping with radiation therapy (RT) in men ( N = 84) with prostate cancer. The experimental group had significantly less disruption in function during and for 3 months following RT than the comparison group. The intervention had no significant effect on negative mood. Consistent with self-regulation theory, similarity between expectations and experience and degree of understanding of the experience mediated the effect of the intervention on function. Emotional-drive theory was not supported. These results are consistent with prior research with surgical patients and support the relevance of the information-processing explanations of self-regulation theory to coping with stressful experiences associated with physical illness.
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subjects Adaptation, Psychological
Aged
Aged, 80 and over
Cancer
Client Education
Coping Behavior
Human
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Neoplasms
Prostate
Prostatic Neoplasms - psychology
Prostatic Neoplasms - radiotherapy
Psychology
Radiation
Radiation Therapy
Sick Role
Stress
Therapy
title Process of Coping With Radiation Therapy
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