Spelling suggestions: "subject:"cancer patients eligious life"" "subject:"cancer patients deligious life""
1 |
Spirituality and religiosity and their relationship to the quality of life in oncology patientsBorman, Patricia D. January 1999 (has links)
As the efficacy of cancer treatments has improved and the life span for cancer patients has extended, interest in patients' quality of life has increased. Assessing patients' quality of life continues to gain importance as it impacts numerous facets of oncology. Similarly, interest in spirituality and religiosity have increased as they become recognized as resources for healing in health care. This study examined spirituality and religiosity and their relationship with quality of life in cancer patients. Additional variables such as age, gender, and stage of cancer were also examined for their relationship to quality of life in cancer patients. A stepwise multiple regression analysis was performed to determine if spirituality, religiosity, age, gender, and stage of cancer are predictors of cancer patients' quality of life. The analysis indicated that patients with higher levels of spirituality tend to experience better quality of life, and patients with more advanced stages of cancer tend to experience lower quality of life. Religiosity, age, and gender were not predictors of cancer patients' quality of life. / Department of Counseling Psychology and Guidance Services
|
2 |
The moderating and mediating effects of religious coping on quality of life in long-term survivors of cancerJenkins, Sarah C. 10 January 2012 (has links)
Religious coping is used to describe how individuals use their religion and religious beliefs to help them cope with difficult situations. Researchers have investigated the role of religious coping in those with cancer; however, little research has been completed with long-term survivors of cancer. Additionally, little research has been completed regarding religious coping and long-term survivorship using advanced statistical analyses. This investigation sought to clarify the role of religious coping in long-term survivors of cancer and their quality of life. Using structural equation modeling, religious coping was tested as both a mediator and a moderator of quality of life.
The study used a sample of 213 participants who were long-term survivors of cancer. The participants completed mail surveys assessing demographic variables, quality of life, and religious coping. Despite poor model fit, religious coping was a mediator in the relationship between demographic variables and quality of life. In the mediation model, both age and sex predicted religious coping. In the moderation model, the only significant path was between religious coping and quality of life.
Results of the study indicate that religious coping acts as a mediator in the relationship between demographic variables and quality of life. Religious coping influences quality of lifeand may be beneficial to explore when working with long-term survivors of cancer. These findings enhance the clinical perspective of religious coping and have important ramifications on psychotherapeutic interventions for working with survivors of cancer. Psychologists who work with survivors of cancer should consider and respect the role religious coping has on the survivor.
Future research must continue to explore the pathways through which religious coping operates. More work must be done with long-term survivors of cancer and with ethnically diverse populations. Researchers must continue to use advanced statistics to study these complex relationships instead of relying on simple count and frequency data that only measure if religious coping is present. As the world of psycho-oncology continues to grow, so must the understanding of the variables involved in healthy and happy survivorship / Department of Counseling Psychology and Guidance Services
|
3 |
Espiritualidade e crise existencial na vivência do câncer / Spirituality and existencial crisis in living with cancerHildegart Hertel 04 December 2006 (has links)
O propósito desta dissertação é examinar como mulheres percebem e vivenciam a experiência de serem diagnosticadas com câncer de mama. A pesquisa social de campo envolve um universo de oito mulheres que passaram por esta trajetória sendo uma delas a própria autora, que traça uma auto-análise de sua experiência com este diagnóstico. Um aspecto específico com o qual a pesquisa busca se ocupar é identificar o lugar que a espiritualidade ocupa na história das mulheres entrevistadas. O câncer de mama apresenta um alto índice da doença no Rio Grande do Sul. Conforme a Revista Gaúcha de Enfermagem, o câncer de mama é a maior causa de morte de mulheres entre 30 a 50 anos de idade. De acordo com as estatísticas do Instituto Nacional do Câncer, o câncer de mama é o segundo tipo mais freqüente de câncer do mundo. Assim sendo, o câncer de mama ainda é uma doença que leva à morte, mesmo com o enorme avanço da medicina. Mas, há quem sobreviva o temido e assustador processo da descoberta e tratamento do câncer. Com a doença do câncer vem também a angústia da finitude. O presente trabalho baseia suas reflexões teóricas em Eugen Drewermann e Paul Tillich e como os mesmos descrevem a angústia existencial do ser humano, diferenciando-a do medo real, que tem o seu objeto definido, enquanto que a angústia existencial tem como fonte de sua permanente ameaça o nada. A angústia e a culpa estão relacionadas, estando a culpa ligada ao afastamento de Deus. A aceitação do ser finito, através da coragem do ser, ato de fé por graça divina, substitui, em última análise, a angústia por confiança no Deus da Vida. Os autores, ambos os teólogos, apontam para a interdisciplinaridade. A proposta dessa pesquisa é de atuar em colaboração com outras ciências, de maneira especial com a Psicologia Analítica. Uma pessoa em crise, que trabalha seus processos interiores, poderá ter facilitado sua entrega confiante a Deus. É ainda sucintamente apresentado, conforme Drewermann, como o patológico se manifesta na vida de pessoas que, assim como todas as demais pessoas, carecem da experiência da graça de Deus para sua libertação. A pesquisa finaliza trazendo a abordagem de Erika Schuchardt, formulada no modelo de uma espiral de oito fases, pelas quais passam as pessoas em crise. / The purpose of this dissertation is to examine how women perceive and live the experience of receiving a diagnostic of breast cancer. Field research involves a total of eight women who have experienced this situation, one of them being the authors self-reflection on a cancer diagnostic. A specific aspect of the present research is to identify the place that spirituality takes in the life history of the interviewed women. The State of Rio Grande do Sul presents a high rate of breast cancer. According to the agency Revistal Gaúcha de Enfermagem, breast cancer is the death main cause among women between thirty and fifty years old. Statistics of the National Cancer Institute indicates that breast cancer occupies the second place among the different sorts of cancer. Even though medicine has shown great advance in the last decades, breast cancer still continues to be a deadly disease. However, there are people who survive the fearsome and frightening fatal process caused by this disease. With cancer comes along the human finitude anxiety. The present work bases its reflection on how Eugen Drewermann and Paul Tillich describe the human existential anxiety distinguishing it from real fear. According to the authors real fear has its object defined, while existential anguish has as source of its permanent threat, the nothingness. Anguish and guilt are connected, but guilt is associated to the alienation from God. Acceptance of the existence as finite, through the courage of Being, which is an act of faith by divine grace, replaces anguish by trust in the God of Life. The authors above, both theologians, aim at interdisciplinarity. The purpose of this research is to act in collaboration with other sciences, specially with Analytical Psychology. A person in crisis working her/his interior processes might have facilitated the confident surrender to God. It is also briefly presented, according to Drewermann, how pathology evidences itself in the life of a person who, as all other persons, lacks the experience of the grace of God to his/her liberation. Concluding, the research approaches Erika Schuchartds theory formulated in the model for working through crisis in eight spiral phases.
|
Page generated in 0.0771 seconds