Psychological Aspects of Early Breast Cancer
Başlık:
Psychological Aspects of Early Breast Cancer
ISBN:
9781461385639
Personal Author:
Edition:
1st ed. 1985.
Yayın Bilgileri:
New York, NY : Springer New York : Imprint: Springer, 1985.
Fiziksel Tanımlama:
133 p. online resource.
Series:
Contributions to Psychology and Medicine
Contents:
1 Breast Cancer and Its Treatment -- History -- Etiology -- Pathology -- Treatment -- The Public Image of Cancer -- 2 The Stress of Breast Cancer -- Adjustment in Mastectomy Patients -- The Threat of Cancer -- The Loss of the Breast -- Radiotherapy -- Adjuvant Systemic Therapy -- 3 Coping with Stress -- Ways of Coping: A General Outline -- Studies of Coping in Cancer Patients -- A Coping Schema -- Coping and Adjustment -- 4 The Surgeon's Role -- Controlling and Treating the Disease -- Power and Dependency Within the Relationship -- Information: The General Case -- Cancer: To Tell or Not to Tell -- Meeting the Patient's Emotional Needs -- 5 Psychological Support: Sources Other than the Surgeon -- Counselling and Therapeutic Interventions -- Social Support -- 6 Cancer Attitudes and Related Behavior -- Delay: A General Analysis -- Studies of Delay by Cancer Patients -- The Value of Breast Self-Examination and Screening -- Changing Attitudes and Behavior -- A General Model -- 7 Cancer: A Psychosomatic Disease? -- Stress and General Illness Susceptibility -- Psychosocial Variables and Cancer: Retrospective Studies -- Methodological Criticisms and Prospective Studies -- New Directions -- 8 Implications for the Care of the Breast Cancer Patient -- A Shift in Emphasis -- Reducing the Stress of Breast Cancer -- Alternative Treatments and Clinical Trials -- References.
Abstract:
Physical illness cannot be effectively treated other than in the context of the psychological factors with which it is associated. The body may have the disease, but it is the patient who is ill. Research psychologists from a number of different backgrounds have, in the past few decades, turned increasingly to the study of physical illness, and there is now an extensive literature on preventive behaviors, the role of stress in the etiology of illness, the patient's reactions to illness and its treatment, and the physician-patient relationship. At the same time practicing clinical psychologists have extended their concern beyond the treatment of speci fically psychiatric disorders, to include also the psychological care of people experiencing distress through illness or injury. Traditionally, these patients have tended to fall through the net, unless their distress is so great that it assumes the proportion of a psychiatric disorder that can then be treated in its own right. Because the physical disorder is the primary one, its existence has detracted from the salience of the very real emotional disturbance to which it can give rise. Moreover, emotional reactions in this setting, being the norm, seems to have been regarded as not meriting special attention and care. This situation is chang ing, and it is not just psychologists or psychiatrists who are responsible for the shift in attitudes. Within general medicine itself, there is now a renewed empha sis on the care of the whole patient and not just the disease.
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Elektronik Erişim:
Full Text Available From Springer Nature Behavioral Science Archive Packages
Dil:
English