Associations between longitudinal changes in sleep disturbance and depressive and anxiety symptoms during the COVID-19 virus pandemic among older women with and without breast cancer in the thinking and living with breast cancer study.
Traci N BetheaWanting ZhaiXingtao ZhouTim A AhlesJaeil AhnHarvey J CohenAsma A DilawariDeena M A GrahamHeather S L JimBrenna C McDonaldZev M NakamuraSunita K PatelKelly E RentscherJames RootAndrew J SaykinBrent J SmallKathleen M Van DykJeanne S MandelblattJudith E CarrollPublished in: Cancer medicine (2022)
Development of sleep disturbances during the COVID-19 virus pandemic may negatively affect older women's mental health, but breast cancer survivors diagnosed with the nonmetastatic disease had similar experiences as women without cancer.
Keyphrases
- coronavirus disease
- sars cov
- mental health
- sleep quality
- respiratory syndrome coronavirus
- physical activity
- papillary thyroid
- breast cancer risk
- depressive symptoms
- polycystic ovary syndrome
- bipolar disorder
- childhood cancer
- squamous cell
- mental illness
- type diabetes
- pregnancy outcomes
- cross sectional
- lymph node metastasis
- young adults
- stress induced