Psychological distress and coping in breast cancer patients and healthy women whose parents survived the holocaust

被引:37
作者
Baider, Lea [1 ]
Goldzweig, Gil
Ever-Hadani, Pnina
Peretz, Tamar
机构
[1] Hadassah Univ Hosp, Dept PsychoOncol, Sharett Inst Oncol, IL-91120 Jerusalem, Israel
[2] Hebrew Univ Jerusalem, Dept Psychol, IL-91905 Jerusalem, Israel
[3] Hebrew Univ Jerusalem, Hadassah Med Sch, Braun Sch Publ Hlth, IL-91905 Jerusalem, Israel
关键词
trauma; second-generation Holocaust; breast cancer; healthy women; cancer; oncology;
D O I
10.1002/pon.1010
中图分类号
R73 [肿瘤学];
学科分类号
100214 ;
摘要
Psychological distress levels of breast cancer patients whose parents were Holocaust survivors ('second-generation Holocaust' patients) were previously shown to be significantly higher than those of a matched group of patients with non-traumatized parents. In this study, we investigated whether this effect reflects only the generally higher distress levels of second-generation Holocaust women or whether breast cancer patients with traumatized parents also present lower adaptation abilities, which result in increased distress to the breast cancer diagnosis. We assessed psychological distress and measures of coping in 193 second-generation Holocaust patients diagnosed with breast cancer, 164 breast cancer patients with non-traumatized parents, 176 healthy second-generation Holocaust women, and 143 healthy women with non-traumatized parents. The main effect of cancer and the main effect of second-generation Holocaust survivor on psychological distress were found to be significant. These two factors (cancer x second generation) had a synergistic effect on the levels of depression and psychoticism. These results support the hypothesis that, at least on some psychological measures, the cumulative distressing effect of having traumatized parents and breast cancer diagnosis is higher than the effect of each factor alone. Copyright (c) 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
引用
收藏
页码:635 / 646
页数:12
相关论文
共 64 条
[31]   Psychobiology of the acute stress response and its relationship to the psychobiology of post-traumatic stress disorder [J].
Marshall, RD ;
Garakani, A .
PSYCHIATRIC CLINICS OF NORTH AMERICA, 2002, 25 (02) :385-+
[32]   The impact of motivation on temporal comparisons: Coping with traumatic events by perceiving personal growth [J].
McFarland, C ;
Alvaro, C .
JOURNAL OF PERSONALITY AND SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2000, 79 (03) :327-343
[33]  
Mikulincer M., 1994, HUMAN LEARNED HELPLE
[34]  
Munroe J., 1995, COMPASSION FATIGUE C, P209
[35]   Predispositions, personality traits, and posttraumatic stress disorder [J].
Paris, J .
HARVARD REVIEW OF PSYCHIATRY, 2000, 8 (04) :175-183
[36]   Holocaust transmission: Perverse or life affirming? [J].
Peskin, H ;
Auerhahn, NC .
JOURNAL OF PERSONAL & INTERPERSONAL LOSS, 2000, 5 (2-3) :283-309
[37]  
Pope KS, 1999, GEN HOSP PSYCHIAT, V21, P157
[38]   THE PSYCHOLOGICAL STATE OF HOLOCAUST SURVIVORS OFFSPRING - AN EPIDEMIOLOGIC AND PSYCHODIAGNOSTIC STUDY [J].
RIECK, M .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BEHAVIORAL DEVELOPMENT, 1994, 17 (04) :649-667
[39]   Disorganized reasoning in holocaust survivors [J].
Sagi, A ;
van IJzendoorn, MH ;
Joels, T ;
Scharf, M .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF ORTHOPSYCHIATRY, 2002, 72 (02) :194-203
[40]   Attachment and traumatic stress in female holocaust child survivors and their daughters [J].
Sagi-Schwartz, A ;
van Ijzendoorn, MH ;
Grossmann, KE ;
Joels, T ;
Grossmann, K ;
Scharf, M ;
Koren-Karie, N ;
Alkalay, S .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRY, 2003, 160 (06) :1086-1092