Could worry and rumination mediate relationships between self-compassion and psychological distress in breast cancer survivors?
Stephen L BrownMaria HughesSophie CampbellM Gemma CherryPublished in: Clinical psychology & psychotherapy (2019)
Many breast cancer (BCa) patients experience clinically significant anxiety and depression in survivorship. Self-compassion offers a bulwark to anxiety and depression in nonclinical, mental health, and some chronic physical health populations. We examined whether self-compassion predicted lower anxiety and depression symptoms in survivors and whether this might be mediated by lower worry and rumination. The design was a cross-sectional survey using self-report measures. Female adult BCa survivors of mixed stages who had finished primary surgical, radiotherapy, or chemotherapy treatments completed self-compassion subscales and worry, rumination, and anxiety and depression scales. Higher self-compassion subscale scores were negatively associated with anxiety and depression. Depressive brooding and worry mediated any effects of self-kindness and mindfulness on depression and anxiety, whereas common humanity directly predicted lower depression scores. Findings are consistent with the view that self-compassion reduces threat-related rumination and worry in BCa survivors, consequently reducing anxiety and depression. This may form a basis for prevention and treatment.
Keyphrases
- mental health
- young adults
- healthcare
- newly diagnosed
- sleep quality
- ejection fraction
- end stage renal disease
- early stage
- prognostic factors
- radiation therapy
- physical activity
- chronic pain
- health information
- mental illness
- stress induced
- patient reported outcomes
- childhood cancer
- rectal cancer
- climate change
- replacement therapy
- combination therapy
- chemotherapy induced