Abstract
BACKGROUND:
The relational impact of
advanced cancer
on both patients and spouse caregivers has rarely been examined
simultaneously. This study describes a framework for understanding
distress in each partner as a consequence of psychosocial
characteristics, burden of disease or of caregiving, and the distress of
the other person. A model focusing on the
protective value of social
relatedness was tested to illustrate the interdependence of patients and
spouses in their mutual adaptation to disease.
METHODS:
A total of 278 advanced
cancer patients and their spouse caregivers completed measures of psychological distress (e.g., depression), physical burden from
cancer
(e.g., symptom count), caregiving burden (i.e., time and task demand),
and social relatedness (i.e., social support and attachment security).
Structural equation modeling was used to extract latent factors
associated with these constructs and to examine their
interrelationships.
RESULTS:
The model fit was adequate.
Patient distress was related to disease burden (standardized path
coefficient = 0.52) and patient social relatedness (-0.32). Caregiver
distress was related to caregiving burden (0.21) and caregiver social
relatedness (-0.51). Caregiving burden was related to patient disease
burden (0.43) and caregiver social relatedness (-0.37).
Reciprocal
pathways between patient and caregiver distress indicated that caregiver
distress was influenced by patient distress (0.30) but not vice versa
(0.12).
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