心理学
合作伙伴效应
自我表露
应对(心理学)
心理困扰
临床心理学
苦恼
联想(心理学)
应对行为
心理健康
社会心理学
心理治疗师
作者
Keren Sella-Shalom,Nimrod Hertz‐Palmor,Michal Braun,Eshkol Rafaeli,Reut Wertheim,Noam Pizem,Einat Shacham‐Shmueli,Ilanit Hasson‐Ohayon
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.genhosppsych.2023.07.005
摘要
This study applies the Actor-Partner Interdependence Model (APIM) to explore the associations between disclosure and concealment with depression and anxiety among patients with cancer and their partners. 90 patient-spouse dyads completed the Self-Disclosure Index (SDI), the Self-Concealment Scale (SCS), the Couples Illness Self-Concealment (CISC) questionnaire, and anxiety and depression via the Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS) and the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS). Significant actor effects were found for most variables, showing disclosure is negatively and concealment is positively associated with depression and anxiety (β between |0.29| to |0.65|, p ≤ .029). Partner's effect showed a negative association between patients' self-disclosure and their spouses' depression (β = −0.35, p = .043). Patients' anxiety was negatively associated with similarity in all communication variables (β between −0.21 to −0.22, p = .042). Dyadic communication is an important correlate of distress among couples coping with cancer. Specifically, concealment behaviors have a positive association with distress, whereas disclosure is related to lower levels of anxiety and depression among both partners. In addition, whereas patients are affected more strongly than their spouses by the dyadic similarity, spouses seem to be more attuned to their partners' behaviors and therefore potentially more related to patients' propensity for sharing.
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