2017
DOI: 10.1155/2017/8104397
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Cognitive-Behavioral Coping, Illness Perception, and Family Adaptability in Oncological Patients with a Family History of Cancer

Abstract: Aim. The study investigated the differences between patients with and without a family history of cancer regarding coping strategies, illness perception, and family adaptability to the disease. Material and Methods. A total of 124 patients diagnosed with cancer were included in the research (55 of them with a family history of cancer). The Cognitive Emotion Regulation Questionnaire, the Strategic Approach to Coping Scale, the Family Adaptability and Cohesion Scale, and the Illness Perception Questionnaire were… Show more

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Cited by 20 publications
(21 citation statements)
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“…High scores on the timeline acute/chronic, timeline cyclical, consequences, and emotional representation subscales indicate that respondents have strongly held beliefs about the chronicity, the cyclical nature, the negative consequences of the illness, and the psychological causes of the illness. High scores on the personal control, treatment control, and illness coherence subscales represent the respondents' positive beliefs about the controllability of the illness and a personal understanding of the condition (Postolica et al, ).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…High scores on the timeline acute/chronic, timeline cyclical, consequences, and emotional representation subscales indicate that respondents have strongly held beliefs about the chronicity, the cyclical nature, the negative consequences of the illness, and the psychological causes of the illness. High scores on the personal control, treatment control, and illness coherence subscales represent the respondents' positive beliefs about the controllability of the illness and a personal understanding of the condition (Postolica et al, ).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Furthermore, illness perceptions can be related to patients' sociodemographic and clinical characteristics (Hopman & Rijken, 2015;Postolica et al, 2017;Yan et al, 2011). Women with higher levels of education are more likely to believe that the duration of the illness will be short and that the illness will be controllable (Anagnostopoulos & Spanea, 2005;Kritpracha, 2004), while those with lower education levels have less personal control and illness coherence and higher emotional representation (Gosse, 2007;Kayaniyil et al, 2009).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The Common Sense Model of Self‐Regulation (CSM) proposes that patients’ coping behaviours, such as adherence, are guided by their illness perception (Moon, Moss‐Morris, Hunter, & Hughes, ). According to the CSM, when faced with illness, individuals always construct a perception of their condition which is structured around nine dimensions (Moon et al., ): (a) identity: the symptoms the patients associates with the illness (Postolica, Iorga, Petrariu, & Azoicai, ), (b) timeline acute/chronic, (c) timeline cyclical: the perceived time frame of disease development and duration (e.g., acute, chronic or cyclical) (Richardson, Schuz, Sanderson, Scott, & Schuz, ), (d) consequences: beliefs about what effect the illness may have on the patient's life (Richardson et al., ), (e) personal control: internal control perception about the disease (Richardson et al., ), (f) treatment control: beliefs about the effectiveness of administered treatment (Keskin et al., ), (g) illness coherence: the degree to which an individual feels she understands the illness (Bassi et al., ), (h) emotional representation: the degree to which an individual links negative emotions to the illness (Bassi et al., ), and (i) cause: personal ideas about aetiology (Postolica et al., ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…(e) personal control: internal control perception about the disease (Richardson et al, 2017), (f) treatment control: beliefs about the effectiveness of administered treatment (Keskin et al, 2017), (g) illness coherence: the degree to which an individual feels she understands the illness (Bassi et al, 2016), (h) emotional representation: the degree to which an individual links negative emotions to the illness (Bassi et al, 2016), and (i) cause: personal ideas about aetiology (Postolica et al, 2017).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%