A Study on the Psychological Factors Affecting the Quality of Life Among Ovarian Cancer Patients in China.

Cancer Manag Res

Department of Social Medicine, School of Public Health, China Medical University, Shenyang, People's Republic of China.

Published: February 2020

Purpose: We aim to test whether resilience mediates the association of fear of progression (FoP) with quality of life (QoL) among ovarian cancer patients in China.

Methods: We collected 230 questionnaires from the First Affiliated Hospital of China Medical University in Liaoning Province, and 209 completed the questionnaire survey. The survey instrument consisted of four questionnaires: a sociodemographic and clinical characteristics questionnaire, the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy general instrument, the Fear of Progression Questionnaire-Short Form and the Connor-Davidson Resilience Scale. Hierarchical regression analysis was used to examine the relationship among FoP, resilience, and QoL, including physical well-being, social well-being, emotional well-being, and functional well-being. We used asymptotic and resampling strategies to examine the indirect effect of resilience.

Results: FoP was negatively associated with resilience (=-0.543, <0.01) and QoL (physical well-being: =-0.537, <0.01; social well-being: =-0.426, <0.01; emotional well-being: =-0.487, <0.01; functional well-being: =-0.529, <0.01). Resilience was positively related with QoL (physical well-being: =0.449, <0.01; social well-being: =0.548, <0.01; emotional well-being: =0.430, <0.01; functional well-being: =0.655, <0.01). Resilience partly mediated the association between FoP and physical well-being (a×b=-0.05, BCa 95% CI: -0.09, -0.02), social well-being (a×b=-0.21, BCa 95% CI: -0.29, -0.14), emotional well-being (a×b=-0.05, BCa 95% CI: -0.08, -0.02), and functional well-being (a×b=-0.24, BCa 95% CI: -0.32, -0.17). The proportion of the mediating effect accounted for by resilience were 22.57%, 57.22%, 26.02%, 53.42% for physical well-being, social well-being, emotional well-being and functional well-being, respectively.

Conclusion: The study showed that resilience could mediate the association between fear of progression and quality of life. It suggests that resilience might provide a potential target for intervention in quality of life with ovarian cancer.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7012214PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/CMAR.S239975DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

quality life
8
ovarian cancer
8
cancer patients
8
fear progression
8
study psychological
4
psychological factors
4
factors quality
4
life ovarian
4
patients china
4
china purpose
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!