1. Group psychotherapy for recently diagnosed breast cancer patients: a multicenter feasibility study
- Author
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H. Irving Pierce, Gail Riggs, Gary R. Morrow, Phillip B. Stott, Catherine C. Classen, Narayan Mudaliar, Patrick J. Flynn, Laura Heard, David Spiegel, and Richard F. Raubertas
- Subjects
Coping (psychology) ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Disease ,Profile of mood states ,Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale ,medicine.disease ,Group psychotherapy ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Distress ,Mood ,Breast cancer ,Oncology ,medicine ,Physical therapy ,business ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
As many as 80% of breast cancer patients report significant distress during initial treatment, yet there is little in the way of systematic psychotherapeutic interventions for women coping with the stress of a recent diagnosis of breast cancer. The literature on psychotherapeutic treatment of cancer patients provides uniform evidence for an improvement in mood, coping and adjustment as a result of group therapy. The present study examined the feasibility of implementing a manualized treatment, supportive-expressive group psychotherapy, in busy oncology practices across the US. This intervention was applied to women with primary breast cancer in a manner which tests not only the efficacy of the approach but also its accessibility to group therapists not previously experienced in its use. One hundred and eleven breast cancer patients within 1 year of diagnosis were recruited from ten geographically diverse sites of the National Cancer Institute's Community Clinical Oncology Program (CCOP) and two academic medical centers. Two therapists from each site were trained in supportive-expressive group psychotherapy. Training consisted of participation in a workshop, reading a treatment manual, and viewing explanatory videotapes. Each patient participated in a supportive-expressive group that met for 12 weekly sessions lasting 90 min. Assessment of mood disturbance was made at entry, 3, 6, and 12 months. Results indicated a significant 40% decrease in the Total Mood Disturbance (TMD) scores of the Profile of Mood States (POMS) (ANOVA F [2,174]=3.98, p
- Published
- 1999
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