Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
339344 | Psychosomatics | 2010 | 7 Pages |
BackgroundAlthough hopelessness has been studied in cancer, no data are available in non-English-speaking countries.ObjectiveThe authors sought to amass data from Southern European countries (Italy, Portugal, Spain, and Switzerland) in order to fill this void.MethodA group of 312 cancer patients completed the Mini-MAC Hopelessness subscale, the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS), the Cancer Worry Inventory (CWI), and a six-item Visual Analog scale (VAS) to measure intensity of physical symptoms, general well-being, difficulty in coping with cancer, intensity of social support from close relationships, leisure activity, and support from religious beliefs.ResultsRegression analysis indicated that HADS–Depression, VAS Maladaptive Coping and Well-Being, and the CWI explained 42% of the variance.ConclusionHopelessness in cancer patients seems not exclusively to correspond to depression, but is related to various other psychosocial factors, such as maladaptive coping, as well.