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. 2009 Jul-Aug;32(4):E15-25.
doi: 10.1097/NCC.0b013e3181a0238f.

The Self-regulation Model of Illness applied to smoking behavior in lung cancer

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The Self-regulation Model of Illness applied to smoking behavior in lung cancer

Kristine K Browning et al. Cancer Nurs. 2009 Jul-Aug.

Abstract

Thirteen to 20% of lung cancer patients continue to smoke after diagnosis. Guided by Self-regulation Theory, the purpose of this study was to examine illness perceptions over time in a sample of lung cancer patients. This prospective 1-group descriptive longitudinal design study included participants 18 years or older, with a lung cancer diagnosis within the past 60 days who self-reported smoking within the past 7 days. At baseline, patients completed a sociodemographics and tobacco use history questionnaire. The Illness Perception Questionnaire-Revised (IPQ-R) was repeated at 3 time points (baseline, 2-4 weeks, and 6 months). Fifty-two participants provided data for the IPQ-R at baseline, 47 at 2 to 4 weeks, and 29 at 6 months. Differences between mean scores for each illness representation attribute of the IPQ-R at repeated time points were calculated by within-subjects repeated-measures analysis of variance and Wilcoxon Signed-Rank Tests. Identity (baseline vs 2-4 weeks: P = .026; baseline vs 6 months: P = .005) and acute/chronic timeline (P = .018) mean scores significantly increased over time; personal and treatment control mean scores significantly decreased over time (P = .007 and P = .047, respectively). Understanding the context in which a patient perceives disease and smoking behavior may contribute to developing interventions that influence behavior change.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Self-regulation model applied to tobacco use in smokers recently diagnosed with lung cancer
Figure 2
Figure 2
Six month mean scores (SD) of the IPQ-R attributes by smoking status as 6 months

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