A Longitudinal Study of Post-Traumatic Growth and Psychological Distress in Colorectal Cancer Survivors.

The stability of post-traumatic growth over time and the relationship between post-traumatic growth and traditional distress outcomes remains unclear. We tracked post-traumatic growth in a population-based sample of colorectal cancer patients from soon after diagnosis to five years subsequently to a...

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Main Authors: Stefano Occhipinti, Suzanne K Chambers, Stephen Lepore, Joanne Aitken, Jeff Dunn
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2015-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4587909?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-b68103ff064c44d9a6ca33a9ed75ea522020-11-24T21:26:35ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032015-01-01109e013911910.1371/journal.pone.0139119A Longitudinal Study of Post-Traumatic Growth and Psychological Distress in Colorectal Cancer Survivors.Stefano OcchipintiSuzanne K ChambersStephen LeporeJoanne AitkenJeff DunnThe stability of post-traumatic growth over time and the relationship between post-traumatic growth and traditional distress outcomes remains unclear. We tracked post-traumatic growth in a population-based sample of colorectal cancer patients from soon after diagnosis to five years subsequently to assess the heterogeneity of a post-traumatic growth response to cancer over time and describe the simultaneous and longitudinal relationships between post-traumatic growth and psychological distress. 1966 colorectal patients who were five months post diagnosis were assessed six times over a five year period. There was considerable heterogeneity associated with both psychological distress and benefit finding scores over time. However, both for benefit finding and psychological distress, the variation in individual scores suggested an underlying positive linear trend and both lagged and lagged change components. Specifically, benefit finding and psychological distress are mutual leading indicators of each other. First, benefit finding served as a leading indicator of distress, in that increases in reported benefit finding from year to year predicted higher future increases in psychological distress. As well, in an inverse relationship, psychological distress served as a leading indicator of benefit finding, such that increases in reported distress from year to year predicted lower future increases in benefit finding. Post-traumatic growth may reflect patients coping efforts to enhance perceptions of wellbeing in response to escalating cancer-related threats, acting as harbinger of increasing trajectories of psychological distress. This explanation is consistent with a cognitive dissonance response in which threats to the integrity of the self then lead to a tendency to accentuate positive aspects of the self.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4587909?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Stefano Occhipinti
Suzanne K Chambers
Stephen Lepore
Joanne Aitken
Jeff Dunn
spellingShingle Stefano Occhipinti
Suzanne K Chambers
Stephen Lepore
Joanne Aitken
Jeff Dunn
A Longitudinal Study of Post-Traumatic Growth and Psychological Distress in Colorectal Cancer Survivors.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Stefano Occhipinti
Suzanne K Chambers
Stephen Lepore
Joanne Aitken
Jeff Dunn
author_sort Stefano Occhipinti
title A Longitudinal Study of Post-Traumatic Growth and Psychological Distress in Colorectal Cancer Survivors.
title_short A Longitudinal Study of Post-Traumatic Growth and Psychological Distress in Colorectal Cancer Survivors.
title_full A Longitudinal Study of Post-Traumatic Growth and Psychological Distress in Colorectal Cancer Survivors.
title_fullStr A Longitudinal Study of Post-Traumatic Growth and Psychological Distress in Colorectal Cancer Survivors.
title_full_unstemmed A Longitudinal Study of Post-Traumatic Growth and Psychological Distress in Colorectal Cancer Survivors.
title_sort longitudinal study of post-traumatic growth and psychological distress in colorectal cancer survivors.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2015-01-01
description The stability of post-traumatic growth over time and the relationship between post-traumatic growth and traditional distress outcomes remains unclear. We tracked post-traumatic growth in a population-based sample of colorectal cancer patients from soon after diagnosis to five years subsequently to assess the heterogeneity of a post-traumatic growth response to cancer over time and describe the simultaneous and longitudinal relationships between post-traumatic growth and psychological distress. 1966 colorectal patients who were five months post diagnosis were assessed six times over a five year period. There was considerable heterogeneity associated with both psychological distress and benefit finding scores over time. However, both for benefit finding and psychological distress, the variation in individual scores suggested an underlying positive linear trend and both lagged and lagged change components. Specifically, benefit finding and psychological distress are mutual leading indicators of each other. First, benefit finding served as a leading indicator of distress, in that increases in reported benefit finding from year to year predicted higher future increases in psychological distress. As well, in an inverse relationship, psychological distress served as a leading indicator of benefit finding, such that increases in reported distress from year to year predicted lower future increases in benefit finding. Post-traumatic growth may reflect patients coping efforts to enhance perceptions of wellbeing in response to escalating cancer-related threats, acting as harbinger of increasing trajectories of psychological distress. This explanation is consistent with a cognitive dissonance response in which threats to the integrity of the self then lead to a tendency to accentuate positive aspects of the self.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4587909?pdf=render
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