Hope and coping with cancer by college women |
Author(s):
,Journal/Book: J Personality. 1998; 66: 350 Main Street, Ste 6, Malden, MA 02148. Blackwell Publishers. 195-214.
Abstract: The relations of dispositional hope to various self-reported cancer-related coping activities were examined in 115 college women. Dispositionally high- as compared to low-hope women were more knowledgeable about cancer, and this relationship remained when the shared variances due to previous academic achievement, experience with cancer among family or friends, and positive and negative affectivity were removed. Additionally, high- as compared to low-hope women reported more hope-related coping responses in four separate imagined phases of cancer (prevention/risk, detection, temporal course, and impact), and these relationships remained when shared variances related to previous academic achievement, knowledge about cancer, experience with cancer, and negative affectivity were removed. Hope is discussed as means of maintaining a ''fighting spirit'' for coping with cancer.
Note: Article Irving LM, Washington State Univ, Pullman,WA 99164 USA
Keyword(s): SKIN-CANCER; BREAST-CANCER; OPTIMISM; VALIDATION; NEUROTICISM; PREVENTION; BELIEFS; REALITY; HEALTH; SCALE
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