A social-cognitive processing model was used to examine the association of social support with intrusive thoughts and avoidance in predicting adjustment in 53 patients receiving an experimental vaccine for the treatment of either metastatic melanoma (n=24) or metastatic renal cell cancer (n=29). Social support, intrusive thoughts/avoidance, psychological distress and quality of life were assessed on the day of the first treatment, on the day of the final treatment, and 1 month after the end of treatment during a routine follow-up visit. Social support at the beginning of treatment was negatively associated with psychological distress and positively associated with mental health quality of life (QOL) 1 month after treatment, and these associations were mediated by intrusive thoughts/avoidance at the end of treatment. There was also an interaction between social support and intrusive thoughts/avoidance at the beginning of treatment in predicting both psychological distress and mental health QOL 1 month after treatment. Specifically, for patients with lower levels of support, greater intrusive thoughts/avoidance was associated with greater psychological distress and poorer mental health QOL 1 month after treatment. However, there was no association between intrusive thoughts/avoidance and adjustment in patients with high levels of social support. These results suggest that social support buffers the negative association between intrusive thoughts/avoidance and psychological adjustment. Overall, the results are consistent with a social-cognitive processing model of post-trauma reactions among cancer patients. Our results highlight the need to assess patients' perceived support and to further develop and assess the benefits of interventions to increase patients' supportive networks and to facilitate cognitive processing of the cancer experience.
Violence against women and girls is an important global health concern. Numerous health organizations highlight engaging men and boys in preventing violence against women as a potentially impactful public health prevention strategy. Adapted from an international setting for use in the US, "Manhood 2.0" is a "gender transformative" program that involves challenging harmful gender and sexuality norms that foster violence against women while promoting bystander intervention (i.e., giving boys skills to interrupt abusive behaviors they witness among peers) to reduce the perpetration of sexual violence (SV) and adolescent relationship abuse (ARA). Manhood 2.0 is being rigorously evaluated in a community-based cluster-randomized trial in 21 lower resource Pittsburgh neighborhoods with 866 adolescent males ages 13-19. The comparison intervention is a job readiness training program which focuses on the skills needed to prepare youth for entering the workforce, including goal setting, accountability, resume building, and interview preparation. This study will provide urgently needed information about the effectiveness of a gender transformative program, which combines healthy sexuality education, gender norms change, and bystander skills to interrupt peers' disrespectful and harmful behaviors to reduce SV/ARA perpetration among adolescent males. In this manuscript, we outline the rationale for and evaluation design of Manhood 2.0. Clinical Trials #: NCT02427061.
This investigation examined the risk-resistance adaptation model for children with sickle cell disease and their primary caregivers. Participants were 55 children, ranging in age from 5 to 16 years with a mean age of 9 years 2 months, diagnosed with sickle cell disease and their primary caregivers, recruited from a university medical center. Measures included adjustment (i.e. primary caregiver and child adjustment), risk factors (i.e. disease and disability, functional independence, and psychosocial stressors), resistance factors (i.e. intrapersonal health locus of control, social-ecological), and stress processing (coping). Primary caregivers' adjustment was associated with developmental coping, changeR2 = .08, and child adaptation was associated with an internal health locus of control, changeR2 = .22. An indirect effect of primary caregivers' coping on child adjustment was found through influence on primary caregivers' adjustment, changeR2 = .11. The findings support research among other chronically ill populations that suggests an association between coping and disease adjustment. The results were interpreted to support the use of theoretically driven models in predicting the adaptation of children with chronic illness and adjustment in their caregivers.
The present study examined two aspects of depressed mood in adolescence: (1) stability across the adolescent years and (2) ability to predict functioning in young adulthood. Participants included 82 Caucasian individuals (46 females and 36 males) who were assessed one time per year for 4 consecutive years during adolescence (mean age at initial assessment = 13.5 years) and again during young adulthood (mean age = 19). The results indicated that depressed mood, as measured by the Children's Depression Inventory (CDI), remained relatively stable across at least 3 consecutive years of data collection during adolescence. In addition, adolescent CDI scores predicted young adult functioning in each of four areas: prosocial competence, self-esteem, externalizing problems, and internalizing problems.
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