2002
DOI: 10.1200/jco.2002.08.521
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Randomized, Controlled Trial of Written Emotional Expression and Benefit Finding in Breast Cancer Patients

Abstract: Experimentally induced emotional expression and benefit finding regarding early-stage breast cancer reduced medical visits for cancer-related morbidities. Effects on psychological outcomes varied as a function of cancer-related avoidance.

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Cited by 449 publications
(473 citation statements)
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References 26 publications
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“…Given that most patients reported experiencing benefits in the context of being HIV+ and that such benefits were associated with better psychological adaptation and more frequent physical activity, an important direction for future research concerns the application of findings to the development of effective coping interventions. Indeed, several interventions designed to improve adaptation in the context of coping with a medical stressor have shown promising results Chesney, Chambers, Taylor, Johnson, & Folkman, 2003;McGregor et al, 2004;Stanton et al, 2002). Further, several studies suggest that benefit finding is amenable to change through cognitive-behavioral and expressive writing (Stanton et al, 2002) interventions.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Given that most patients reported experiencing benefits in the context of being HIV+ and that such benefits were associated with better psychological adaptation and more frequent physical activity, an important direction for future research concerns the application of findings to the development of effective coping interventions. Indeed, several interventions designed to improve adaptation in the context of coping with a medical stressor have shown promising results Chesney, Chambers, Taylor, Johnson, & Folkman, 2003;McGregor et al, 2004;Stanton et al, 2002). Further, several studies suggest that benefit finding is amenable to change through cognitive-behavioral and expressive writing (Stanton et al, 2002) interventions.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Indeed, several interventions designed to improve adaptation in the context of coping with a medical stressor have shown promising results Chesney, Chambers, Taylor, Johnson, & Folkman, 2003;McGregor et al, 2004;Stanton et al, 2002). Further, several studies suggest that benefit finding is amenable to change through cognitive-behavioral and expressive writing (Stanton et al, 2002) interventions. Interventions that facilitate benefit finding may prove helpful in reducing distress and improving quality of life.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The meaning of survivorship may be based on a woman's age, life experiences, disease, ethnicity, or sociocultural background. While the literature is abundant with narratives of Caucasian breast cancer survivors (Documet, Trauth, Key, Flatt, & Jernigan, 2012;Helgeson, 2011;Morris, Campbell, Dwyer, Dunn, & Chambers, 2011;Pieters & Heilemann, 2011;Stanton et al, 2002), there remains a dearth of literature on AABCS. Pieters and Heilemann (2011) explored the concept of cancer survivor and cancer survivorship among 18 female breast cancer survivors from 70 to 94 years of age.…”
Section: Background/literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Stanton and colleagues 1,36 have conducted two studies focusing on the reentry phase in patients with early-stage breast cancer. In the first study, 36 they followed 92 patients with breast cancer from shortly after treatment completion through 3 months, with an additional assessment at 1 year.…”
Section: Predictors Of Positive Adjustment During the Reentry Phasementioning
confidence: 99%
“…An example of such research is a small, randomized, controlled trial of a writing intervention to promote reentry adjustment. 1 In that trial, the researchers hypothesized that inducing women to write about either their deepest thoughts and feelings about their breast cancer experience or the positive aspects of their experience would promote positive psychological and physical health outcomes compared with writing about the facts of their experience with cancer. A second hypothesis was that women who tend to avoid their thoughts and feelings regarding cancer may benefit more from focusing on the positive aspects of their experience, whereas women who are low in avoidance may benefit more from full expression.…”
Section: Interventions To Promote Posttreatment Adaptationmentioning
confidence: 99%