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abstract
Dispositional optimism refers to generalized outcome expectancies that good things, rather than bad things, will happen;
BACKGROUND
Prior
research has identified unrealistic optimism as a bias that might
impair informed consent among patient-subjects in early-phase oncology
trials. However, optimism is not a unitary construct; it also can be
defined as a general disposition, or what is called dispositional
optimism. The authors assessed whether dispositional optimism would be
related to high expectations for personal therapeutic benefit reported
by patient-subjects in these trials but not to the therapeutic
misconception. The authors also assessed how dispositional optimism
related to unrealistic optimism.
METHODS
Patient-subjects
completed questionnaires designed to measure expectations for
therapeutic benefit, dispositional optimism, unrealistic optimism, and
the therapeutic misconception.
RESULTS
Dispositional
optimism was found to be significantly associated with higher
expectations for personal therapeutic benefit (Spearman rank correlation
coefficient [r], 0.333; P<.0001), but was not associated with the therapeutic misconception (Spearman r, -0.075; P = .329). Dispositional optimism was found to be weakly associated with unrealistic optimism (Spearman r, 0.215; P = .005). On multivariate analysis, both dispositional optimism (P = .02) and unrealistic optimism (P<.0001)
were found to be independently associated with high expectations for
personal therapeutic benefit. Unrealistic optimism (P = .0001), but not dispositional optimism, was found to be independently associated with the therapeutic misconception.
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