A terror management theory based intervention for anxiety in spouses of cancer patients: a multiple-baseline study

As the U.S. population ages the number of family caregivers is expected to rise. Family caregivers are a valuable source of informal healthcare services for patients and the public, in terms of reducing healthcare costs. However, research suggests family caregiving is not only financially costly for...

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Main Author: Lewis, Adam Michael
Other Authors: Liu, William Ming
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: University of Iowa 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/2235
https://ir.uiowa.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=6784&context=etd
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spelling ndltd-uiowa.edu-oai-ir.uiowa.edu-etd-67842019-10-13T04:53:53Z A terror management theory based intervention for anxiety in spouses of cancer patients: a multiple-baseline study Lewis, Adam Michael As the U.S. population ages the number of family caregivers is expected to rise. Family caregivers are a valuable source of informal healthcare services for patients and the public, in terms of reducing healthcare costs. However, research suggests family caregiving is not only financially costly for individuals, but associated with a number of medical and mental health risks, with spouses at higher risk for negative outcomes compared to other family members. Traditional evidence-based therapies for stress in family caregivers have been shown to be minimally efficacious with spouses. No therapies take into account the existential nature of spouse caregiver stress, including the potential nonconscious role of loss of life meaning/purpose and death anxiety. This study of multiple baseline design preliminarily explored the effects of a novel 8-week Terror Management Theory integrated existential psychotherapy (TIE) on stress and nonconscious mechanisms believed to function as buffers for existential anxiety, in five women with spouses receiving cancer treatment. Methods included ecological momentary assessment (EMA) of anxiety and self-esteem states via text message sent three times daily – and intermittent assessment of death anxiety, self-compassion, meaning in life, and quality of life at baseline, intervention, immediate post, and 1-month follow-up. Visual and statistical analyses indicated significant between-phase trend changes in anxiety and self-esteem within participants, although direction of changes varied across participants. Additionally, changes in death anxiety, self-compassion, meaning in life, and quality of life between phases varied across participants in directions inconsistent with intervention aims and participants’ subjective impressions of intervention-related changes. Mixed findings point to the complexity of spouse caregiver psychology and highlight the need for more effective therapies with this population. Results may also guide future research and development of existentially-informed therapies. 2016-12-01T08:00:00Z dissertation application/pdf https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/2235 https://ir.uiowa.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=6784&context=etd Copyright © 2016 Adam Michael Lewis Theses and Dissertations eng University of IowaLiu, William Ming death anxiety ecological momentary assessment existential psychotherapy family caregiving stress terror management theory Educational Psychology
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic death anxiety
ecological momentary assessment
existential psychotherapy
family caregiving
stress
terror management theory
Educational Psychology
spellingShingle death anxiety
ecological momentary assessment
existential psychotherapy
family caregiving
stress
terror management theory
Educational Psychology
Lewis, Adam Michael
A terror management theory based intervention for anxiety in spouses of cancer patients: a multiple-baseline study
description As the U.S. population ages the number of family caregivers is expected to rise. Family caregivers are a valuable source of informal healthcare services for patients and the public, in terms of reducing healthcare costs. However, research suggests family caregiving is not only financially costly for individuals, but associated with a number of medical and mental health risks, with spouses at higher risk for negative outcomes compared to other family members. Traditional evidence-based therapies for stress in family caregivers have been shown to be minimally efficacious with spouses. No therapies take into account the existential nature of spouse caregiver stress, including the potential nonconscious role of loss of life meaning/purpose and death anxiety. This study of multiple baseline design preliminarily explored the effects of a novel 8-week Terror Management Theory integrated existential psychotherapy (TIE) on stress and nonconscious mechanisms believed to function as buffers for existential anxiety, in five women with spouses receiving cancer treatment. Methods included ecological momentary assessment (EMA) of anxiety and self-esteem states via text message sent three times daily – and intermittent assessment of death anxiety, self-compassion, meaning in life, and quality of life at baseline, intervention, immediate post, and 1-month follow-up. Visual and statistical analyses indicated significant between-phase trend changes in anxiety and self-esteem within participants, although direction of changes varied across participants. Additionally, changes in death anxiety, self-compassion, meaning in life, and quality of life between phases varied across participants in directions inconsistent with intervention aims and participants’ subjective impressions of intervention-related changes. Mixed findings point to the complexity of spouse caregiver psychology and highlight the need for more effective therapies with this population. Results may also guide future research and development of existentially-informed therapies.
author2 Liu, William Ming
author_facet Liu, William Ming
Lewis, Adam Michael
author Lewis, Adam Michael
author_sort Lewis, Adam Michael
title A terror management theory based intervention for anxiety in spouses of cancer patients: a multiple-baseline study
title_short A terror management theory based intervention for anxiety in spouses of cancer patients: a multiple-baseline study
title_full A terror management theory based intervention for anxiety in spouses of cancer patients: a multiple-baseline study
title_fullStr A terror management theory based intervention for anxiety in spouses of cancer patients: a multiple-baseline study
title_full_unstemmed A terror management theory based intervention for anxiety in spouses of cancer patients: a multiple-baseline study
title_sort terror management theory based intervention for anxiety in spouses of cancer patients: a multiple-baseline study
publisher University of Iowa
publishDate 2016
url https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/2235
https://ir.uiowa.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=6784&context=etd
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