Open J Psychiatry Allied Sci. 2015;6:122-6. doi: 10.5958/2394-2061.2015.00009.9. Epub 2015 Mar 31.

Perceived stress and coping in patients with head and neck cancer.

Deb K, Deka K.

 

Abstract

 

Background: Head and neck cancer accounts for 30% of all cancers. The diagnosis with cancer imparts a lot of stress and the patient’s ability to cope with this stress reflects in their quality of life.

Aim: To study perceived stress, coping and its correlation in patients with head and neck cancer.

Materials and methods: The study was a case controlled study. After ethical clearance from institutional review board, 50 subjects with head and neck cancer, and 50 age and sex matched healthy controls from the same socio-cultural background were selected. Each group comprised of 30 males and 20 females between 21-70 years of age, and they were assessed with Perceived Stress Scale and Ways of Coping Questionnaire. Unpaired sample t-test and Spearman correlation were used, and results were obtained.

Results: The study group had significantly higher stress than the controls (p<0.05), and using confrontive coping, accepting responsibility, and escape avoidance as coping strategy had positive correlation with perceived stress (p<0.05), while seeking social support and positive reappraisal as coping strategy had negative correlation (p<0.05).

Conclusion: Patients with head and neck cancer have a significantly high stress, and maladaptive coping may further aggravate this stress.

FULL TEXT | PDF

 

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.

Nach oben