Resilience as a Factor Influencing Psychological Distress Experience in Patients with Neuro-Oncological Disease.
Jan IlgenMirjam RenovanzAndreas StengelStephan ZipfelNorbert SchäffelerPublished in: Current oncology (Toronto, Ont.) (2022)
Cancer causes psychological distress. Approximately one-third of all patients with cancer suffer from distress requiring psycho-oncological treatment. Examining factors contributing to their distress can inform approaches to counteracting them. Among such factors, resilience is considered to be a psychological adaptive capacity resulting from complex genetic, epigenetic, psychological, and environmental influences. For that reason, we investigated resilience as a factor of psychological distress experience among patients with neuro-oncological disease. To assess distress among patients with neuro-oncological diseases, we performed electronic psycho-oncological screening in the Department of Neurosurgery at Tübingen University Hospital ( n = 100) following tumor surgery (T 0 ) using the Resilience Scale 13, the Hornheider Screening Instrument, the Patient Health Questionnaire-2, the Generalized Anxiety Disorder Scale-2, and the Distress Thermometer, all administered on tablets. Follow-up was done 6 months after (T 1 ). The distress of patients with neuro-oncological disease decreased significantly after 6 months ( p < 0.01). Most patients (87%) showed moderate to high resilience. Although significant correlations with distress are measurable at the T 0 time point (ρ = -0.318 **, p < 0.01), no significant correlations were observed at T 1 . Thus, resilience seems to significantly impact distress in the acute phase of the neuro-oncological disease. For clinical practice, our findings suggest that resilience-focused screening can provide useful information about patients at risk of experiencing distress.
Keyphrases
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