Longitudinal changes in spiritual well-being and associations with emotional distress, pain, and optimism-pessimism: a prospective observational study of terminal cancer patients admitted to a palliative care unit.

Item request has been placed! ×
Item request cannot be made. ×
loading   Processing Request
  • Author(s): Yang Y;Yang Y; Zhao X; Zhao X; Cui M; Cui M; Wang S; Wang S; Wang Y; Wang Y; Wang Y
  • Source:
    Supportive care in cancer : official journal of the Multinational Association of Supportive Care in Cancer [Support Care Cancer] 2021 Dec; Vol. 29 (12), pp. 7703-7714. Date of Electronic Publication: 2021 Jun 19.
  • Publication Type:
    Journal Article; Observational Study
  • Language:
    English
  • Additional Information
    • Source:
      Publisher: Springer International Country of Publication: Germany NLM ID: 9302957 Publication Model: Print-Electronic Cited Medium: Internet ISSN: 1433-7339 (Electronic) Linking ISSN: 09414355 NLM ISO Abbreviation: Support Care Cancer Subsets: MEDLINE
    • Publication Information:
      Original Publication: Berlin : Springer International, c1993-
    • Subject Terms:
    • Abstract:
      Purpose: Although spiritual well-being (SWB) is gaining increasing attention within the international palliative care (PC) guidelines, a lack of insight exists into the correlates and course of SWB among cancer patients. We therefore conducted a prospective observational study to capture trend of SWB and to identify their predictors in Chinese inpatients with terminal cancer receiving short-term PC.
      Methods: A prospective observational study was conducted of terminal cancer inpatients in the hospice ward, Shengjing Hospital of China Medical University. A total of 108 patients completed self-report questionnaires on Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy-Spiritual Well-being, Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale, Numerical Rating Scales, and Life Orientation Scale-Revised anonymously at baseline; SWB, depression, anxiety, and pain were subsequently assessed at 1-week interval. Multilevel regression was used to analyze the temporal course and predictors of SWB.
      Results: Patients' existential well-being (B =  - 0.99, p = 0.008; 95%CI =  - 1.72 to - 0.26) and meaning dimension (B =  - 0.87, p < 0.001; 95% CI =  - 1.29 to - 0.43) significantly decreased after admission to the PC unit, but peace and faith did not change over time. Increases in depression and pain were related to lower existential well-being, particularly in the meaning dimension. Optimism-pessimism moderated the linear trend of existential well-being and meaning domain, such that those with higher optimism and lower pessimism paired with a decrease in outcomes.
      Conclusions: Terminal cancer patients experienced worsening existential well-being, particularly in the meaning facet while hospitalized, indicating that PC should include content that targets the existential concerns of spirituality in China. These findings also supported the need for an integrated PC to address personality traits and emotional and physical distress in this population.
      (© 2021. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.)
    • References:
      Yang YL, Liu L, Wang Y et al (2013) The prevalence of depression and anxiety among Chinese adults with cancer: a systematic review and meta-analysis. BMC Cancer 13:393. (PMID: 239678233765872)
      Sun GW, Yang YL, Yang XB et al (2020) Preoperative insomnia and its association with psychological factors, pain and anxiety in Chinese colorectal cancer patients. Support Care Cancer 28:2911–2919. (PMID: 31758321)
      Mesquita AC, Chaves ÉCL, Barros GAM (2017) Spiritual needs of patients with cancer in palliative care: an integrative review. Curr Opin Support Palliat 11:334–340.
      Clyne B, O’Neill SM, Nuzum D et al (2019) Patients’ spirituality perspectives at the end of life: a qualitative evidence synthesis. BMJ Support Palliat Care. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjspcare-2019-002016. (PMID: 10.1136/bmjspcare-2019-00201631771958)
      Martoni AA, Varani S, Peghetti B et al (2017) Spiritual well‐being of Italian advanced cancer patients in the home palliative care setting. Eur J Cancer Care 26(4):e12677.
      Bandeali S, des Ordons AR, Sinnarajah A, (2020) Comparing the physical, psychological, social, and spiritual needs of patients with non-cancer and cancer diagnoses in a tertiary palliative care setting. Palliat Support Care 18:513–518. (PMID: 31771668)
      Bovero A, Leombruni P, Miniotti M, Rocca G, Torta T (2016) Spirituality, quality of life, psychological adjustment in terminal cancer patients in hospice. Eur J Cancer Care 25:961–969.
      Peterman AH, Fitchett G, Brady MJ, Hernandez L, Cella H (2002) Measuring spiritual well-being in people with cancer: the functional assessment of chronic illness therapy-Spiritual Well-being Scale (FACIT-Sp). Ann Behav Med 24:49–58. (PMID: 12008794)
      Cheng Q, Liu X, Li X, Wang Y, Mao T, Chen Y (2019) Improving spiritual well-being among cancer patients: implications for clinical care. Support Care Cancer 27:3403–3409. (PMID: 30648209)
      Jimenez-Fonseca P, Lorenzo-Seva U, Ferrando PJ et al (2018) The mediating role of spirituality (meaning, peace, faith) between psychological distress and mental adjustment in cancer patients. Support Care Cancer 26:1411–1418. (PMID: 29143135)
      Visser A, de Jager Meezenbroek EC, Garssen B (2018) Does spirituality reduce the impact of somatic symptoms on distress in cancer patients? Cross-sectional and longitudinal findings. Soc Sci Med 214:57–66. (PMID: 30149200)
      Wang YC, Lin CC (2016) Spiritual well-being may reduce the negative impacts of cancer symptoms on the quality of life and the desire for hastened death in terminally ill cancer patients. Cancer Nurs 39:E43–E50. (PMID: 26378401)
      Puchalski C, Ferrell B, Virani R et al (2009) Improving the quality of spiritual care as a dimension of palliative care: the report of the Consensus Conference. J Palliat Med 12:885–904. (PMID: 19807235)
      Best M, Leget C, Goodhead A, Paal P (2020) An EAPC white paper on multi-disciplinary education for spiritual care in palliative care. BMC Palliat Care 19:9. (PMID: 319414866964109)
      Nguyen HQ, Ruel N, Macias M et al (2018) Translation and evaluation of a lung cancer, palliative care intervention for community practice. J Pain Symptom Manage 56:709–718. (PMID: 300769666248339)
      Ning X (2019) Hospice and palliative care research in mainland China: current status and future direction. Palliat Med 33:1127–1128. (PMID: 31328645)
      Zhao XX, Cui M, Geng YH, Yang YL (2019) A systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials of palliative care for pain among Chinese adults with cancer. BMC Palliat Care 18:69. (PMID: 313950396688327)
      Bovero A, Tosi C, Botto R, Opezzo M, Giono-Calvetto F, Torta R (2019) The spirituality in end-of-life cancer patients, in relation to anxiety, depression, coping strategies and the daily spiritual experiences: a cross-sectional study. J Relig Health 58:2144–2160. (PMID: 31165319)
      Rabow MW, Knish SJ (2015) Spiritual well-being among outpatients with cancer receiving concurrent oncologic and palliative care. Support Care Cancer 23:919–923. (PMID: 25231797)
      Kandasamy A, Chaturvedi SK, Desai G (2011) Spirituality, distress, depression, anxiety, and quality of life in patients with advanced cancer. Indian J Cancer 48:55–59. (PMID: 21248445)
      Bai J, Brubaker A, Meghani SH, Bruner DW, Yeager KA (2018) Spirituality and quality of life in black patients with cancer pain. J Pain Symptom Manage 56:390–398. (PMID: 29857179)
      Carver CS, Scheier M (2003) Optimism. In: Lopez SJ, Snyder CR (eds) Positive psychological assessment: a handbook of models and measures. American Psychological Association, Lawrence, KS, pp 75–89.
      Faye-Schjøll HH, Schou-Bredal I (2019) Pessimism predicts anxiety and depression in breast cancer survivors: a 5-year follow-up study. Psychooncology 28:1314–1320. (PMID: 30950120)
      Ren Y, Li S, Zhou S et al (2019) Optimism outweighs neuroticism and anxiety sensitivity to predict insomnia symptoms in women after surgery for breast cancer. Support Care Cancer 27:2903–2909. (PMID: 30560420)
      Hirsch JK, Nsamenang SA, Chang EC et al (2014) Spiritual well-being and depressive symptoms in female African American suicide attempters: mediating effects of optimism and pessimism. Psycholog Relig Spiritual 6:276–283.
      Pinquart M, Fröhlich C, Silbereisen RK (2007) Optimism, pessimism, and change of psychological well-being in cancer patients. Psychol Health Med 12:421–432. (PMID: 17620206)
      Fasano J, Shao T, Huang H, Kessler AJ, Kolodka OP, Shapiro CL (2020) Optimism and coping: do they influence health outcomes in women with breast cancer? A systemic review and meta-analysis. Breast Cancer Res Treat 183:495–501. (PMID: 32691379)
      Noguchi W, Ohno T, Morita S et al (2004) Reliability and validity of the Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy-Spiritual (FACIT–Sp) for Japanese patients with cancer. Support Care Cancer 12:240–245. (PMID: 14740282)
      Zigmond AS, Snaith RP (1983) The hospital anxiety and depression scale. Acta Psychiatr Scand 67:361–370. (PMID: 6880820)
      Thong ISK, Jensen MP, Miró J, Tan G (2018) The validity of pain intensity measures: what do the NRS, VAS, VRS, and FPS-R measure? Scand J Pain 18:99–107. (PMID: 29794282)
      Firdous S, Mehta Z, Fernandez C, Behm B, Davis M (2017) A comparison of numeric pain rating scale (NPRS) and the visual analog scale (VAS) in patients with chronic cancer-associated pain. J Clin Oncol 35:217.
      Singer JD (1998) Using SAS PROC MIXED to fit multilevel models, hierarchical models, and individual growth models. J Educ Behav Stat 24:323–355.
      Hayes AF (2013) An introduction to mediation, moderation, and conditional process analysis: a regression-based approach. Guilford Press, New York.
      Davis LZ, Cuneo M, Thaker PH, Goodheart MJ, Bender D, Lutgendorf SK (2018) Changes in spiritual well-being and psychological outcomes in ovarian cancer survivors. Psychooncology 27:477–483. (PMID: 28637083)
      Canada AL, Murphy PE, Stein KD, Alcaraz KI, Fitchett G (2019) Trajectories of spiritual well-being in long-term survivors of cancer: a report from the American Cancer Society’s Studies of Cancer Survivors–I. Cancer 125:1726–1736. (PMID: 30633818)
      Tang ST, Liu LN, Lin KC et al (2014) Trajectories of the multidimensional dying experience for terminally ill cancer patients. J Pain Symptom Manage 48:863–874. (PMID: 24742788)
      Murray SA, Kendall M, Grant E, Boyd K, Barclay S, Sheikh A (2007) Patterns of social, psychological, and spiritual decline toward the end of life in lung cancer and heart failure. J Pain Symptom Manage 34:393–402. (PMID: 17616334)
      Yan Y, Zhang H, Gao W et al (2020) Current awareness of palliative care in China. Lancet Glob Health 8:e333–e335. (PMID: 32087166)
      Norris L, Walseman K, Puchalski CM (2013) Communicating about spiritual issues with cancer patients. In: Surbone A, Zwitter M, Rajer M, Stiefel R (eds) New challenges in communication with cancer patients. Springer, Boston, MA, pp 91–103.
      Mazzotti E, Mazzuca F, Sebastiani C, Scoppola A, Marchetti P (2011) Predictors of existential and religious well-being among cancer patients. Support Care Cancer 19:1931–1937. (PMID: 21107614)
      Siddall PJ, McIndoe L, Austin P, Wrigley PJ (2017) The impact of pain on spiritual well-being in people with a spinal cord injury. Spinal Cord 55:105–111. (PMID: 27241444)
      Georgesen J, Dungan JM (1996) Managing spiritual distress in patients with advanced cancer pain. Cancer Nurs 19:376–383. (PMID: 8885486)
      Allison PJ, Guichard C, Fung K, Gilain L (2003) Dispositional optimism predicts survival status 1 year after diagnosis in head and neck cancer patients. J Clin Oncol 21:543–548. (PMID: 12560447)
      Yang YL, Li MY, Liu L, Wang L (2018) Perceived stress and its associated demographic-clinical characteristics and positive expectations among Chinese cervical, kidney, and bladder cancer patients. Support Care Cancer 26:2303–2312. (PMID: 29404843)
      Scheier MF, Carver CS, Bridges MW (2001) Optimism, pessimism, and psychological well-being. In: Chang EC (ed) Optimism & pessimism: implications for theory, research, and practice. American Psychological Association, Lawrence, KS, pp 189–216.
      Kwan CWM, Chan CWH, Choi KC (2019) The effectiveness of a nurse-led short term life review intervention in enhancing the spiritual and psychological well-being of people receiving palliative care: a mixed method study. Int J Nurs Stud 91:134–143. (PMID: 30690289)
      Carver CS, Scheier MF, Segerstrom SC (2010) Optimism. Clin Psychol Rev 30:879–889. (PMID: 201709984161121)
      Visser A, Garssen B, Vingerhoets A (2010) Spirituality and well-being in cancer patients: a review. Psychooncology 19:565–572. (PMID: 19916163)
    • Grant Information:
      72004232 National Natural Science Foundation of China
    • Contributed Indexing:
      Keywords: Palliative care; Prospective study; Psycho-oncology; Spirituality
    • Publication Date:
      Date Created: 20210619 Date Completed: 20211028 Latest Revision: 20211028
    • Publication Date:
      20221213
    • Accession Number:
      10.1007/s00520-021-06320-8
    • Accession Number:
      34146165