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A spotlight on avoidance coping to manage fear of recurrence among breast cancer survivors in an eHealth intervention

Authors :
Daniel L. Hall
Beverly J. Levine
Elizabeth Jeter
Allison Chandler
Janet A. Tooze
Jenna Duffecy
David Victorson
William Gradishar
Joseph Leach
Thomas Saphner
Mary Lou Smith
Frank Penedo
David C. Mohr
David Cella
Lynne I. Wagner
Source :
Journal of Behavioral Medicine. 45:771-781
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2022.

Abstract

Fear of recurrence (FoR) is prevalent among breast cancer survivors (BCS) and may be exacerbated by avoidance coping. This study examined BCS with avoidance coping and their engagement in a FoR eHealth intervention (FoRtitude).BCS (N = 196) with elevated FoR participated in FoRtitude. Patient-reported measures assessed avoidance coping with FoR and baseline emotional and behavioral health. Intervention engagement was measured quantitatively (e.g., website logins, telecoaching attendance) and qualitatively (i.e., telecoaching notes).38 BCS (19%) endorsed avoidance coping, which was associated with more severe post-traumatic anxiety-related symptoms and worse global mental health (ps .05), but not anxiety (p = .19), depression (p = .11), physical health (p = .12), alcohol consumption (p = .85), or physical activity (p = .39). Avoidance coping was not associated with engagement levels (ps .05) but did characterize engagement-related motivators and barriers.Avoidance coping was not a barrier to FoRtitude engagement. eHealth delivery is a promising modality for engaging survivors with avoidance coping in FoR interventions.

Details

ISSN :
15733521 and 01607715
Volume :
45
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Behavioral Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e82f206c243a04079786d65a7ff7d7c7
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10865-022-00349-8