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. 2010 Sep-Oct;8(5):196-201.
doi: 10.1016/j.suponc.2010.09.004.

Longitudinal effects of social support and adaptive coping on the emotional well-being of survivors of localized prostate cancer

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Longitudinal effects of social support and adaptive coping on the emotional well-being of survivors of localized prostate cancer

Eric S Zhou et al. J Support Oncol. 2010 Sep-Oct.

Abstract

Survivors of prostate cancer experience treatment-related physical side effects that can compromise emotional well-being for years post-treatment. There is limited research investigating how social support and the use of coping may affect the emotional well-being of this population following treatment. The aim of this study was to investigate how social support and coping impact emotional well-being 2 years after treatment in survivors of localized prostate cancer who have received either radical prostatectomy or radiotherapy. Psychosocial and disease-specific measures were administered to an ethnically and demographically diverse sample of 180 men treated for localized prostate cancer at baseline and at 2-year follow-up. Regression analyses demonstrated that higher levels of social support at baseline predicted better emotional well-being 2 years later. Furthermore, higher levels of adaptive coping at baseline partially mediated the relationship between social support and emotional well-being. Supportive relationships may contribute to improved emotional well-being following treatment by facilitating the use of adaptive coping strategies. Attention should be given to strengthening social support networks and educating survivors of prostate cancer on adaptive coping techniques.

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