22 research outputs found

    Psychosocial determinants of lifestyle change after a cancer diagnosis:A systematic review of the literature

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    The aim of this study is to provide a systematic overview of the scientific literature on sociodemographic, psychological and social determinants that may facilitate or hamper lifestyle change after the diagnosis cancer. Four databases (PubMed, PsychINFO, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL), and Web of Science) were searched for relevant papers up to October 2021. Of the 9586 references yielded by the literature search, 123 papers were included: 71 quantitative and 52 qualitative papers. Findings showed a large variety of determinants influencing lifestyle change after cancer diagnosis, with differences between lifestyle behaviors (physical activity, diet, smoking, alcohol, sun protection, and multiple lifestyle behaviors) and findings from quantitative vs. qualitative studies. Findings demonstrate the important role of oncology healthcare professionals in promoting healthy lifestyle changes in cancer survivors. In addition, findings inform researchers involved in the development of health promotion programs about the methods and strategies they can use to promote healthy lifestyle changes in cancer survivors. Favorable lifestyle changes are expected to have beneficial effects on cancer risk and overall health in cancer survivors

    Bariatric surgery in young adults:A multicenter study into weight loss, dietary adherence, and quality of life

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    Background: Numerous studies have demonstrated that bariatric surgery is an effective intervention for morbid obesity, but study samples are characterized by an underrepresentation of young adult patients.Objectives: The aim of this study was to evaluate weight loss, dietary adherence, and quality of life (QoL) in a multicenter, young adult sample, in the first 6 years after bariatric surgery.Setting: Four general hospitals in the Netherlands.Methods: A total of 184 young adult patients who underwent bariatric surgery between 6 and 74 months previously at the age of 18 to 24 years were included, interviewed by phone, and sent questionnaires assessing postoperative weight, QoL, and lifestyle behaviors including dietary adherence. Complete data were available for those 96 patients who returned the questionnaires.Results: Mean percent weight loss was 30.2 (SD 10.7) for laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy and 35.6 (SD 6.9) for laparoscopic Roux-en-Y gastric bypass. Adherence to postoperative dietary recommendations declined over the years (r = .25, P = .02) and explained 8.3% of the variance in weight loss (r = .29, P = .005). QoL scores lagged behind national norms for young adults and were largely unrelated to weight loss. A quarter of patients (25%) turned out to be not in education, employment, or training and 38% had used mental healthcare services since surgery, which occurred independent of weight loss and concurred with poorer QoL.Conclusion: Young adult patients achieve weight loss comparable to adult patients after bariatric surgery. However, postoperative adherence to behavioral recommendations and psychosocial functioning clearly demonstrate room for improvement and require adjunctive interventions.</p

    Partner support and distress in women with breast cancer:The role of patients' awareness of support and level of mastery

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    The aim of the present study was to investigate the associations between partners' ways of providing support (both active engagement and protective buffering) and distress in women with breast cancer as a function of patients' awareness of the support received and their sense of mastery. These associations were investigated both cross-sectionally and longitudinally (i.e. changes in distress over time). At 3 months (T1) after diagnosis, women with breast cancer and their partners (n = 82 couples) were assessed regarding partners' supportive behaviour. Women also indicated their sense of mastery. At both 3 and 9 months (T2) after diagnosis, women reported their level of distress. Cross-sectional as well as longitudinal analyses showed that active engagement was unrelated to distress, regardless of patients' awareness of the support received and their feelings of mastery. In contrast, perceived protective buffering was found to be associated with more concurrent distress (i.e. cross-sectionally). Moreover, protective buffering that was reported by partners but remained unnoticed by patients was associated with higher levels of concurrent distress, but only for patients who were low in mastery. Over time, protective buffering that remained unnoticed by patients was associated with more distress, regardless of women's sense of mastery

    Attachment style and post-bariatric surgery health behaviours:the mediating role of self-esteem and health self-efficacy

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    Background: Attachment avoidance and anxiety have been linked to overweight and poor health behaviours, yet the mechanisms that underpin the relationship between attachment and health behaviours are not fully understood. Self-esteem and self-efficacy have been found to differ between attachment styles, rendering these variables potential mediators of the relationship. This longitudinal study investigated the serial mediation between preoperative attachment and 2-year post-operative health behaviours through self-esteem and health self-efficacy. Methods: Participants were 263 bariatric surgery patients (75.7% females, aged 47.7 ± 10.4 years, BMI 38.9 ± 3.6 kg/m2) assessed before the operation and again one and two years after the surgery. Patients completed the Experiences for Close Relationships Brief Scale, Rosenberg Self-esteem scale, Weight Efficacy Lifestyle Questionnaire, Bariatric Surgery Self-Management Questionnaire, Exercise Self-Efficacy Scale and the Exercise Behaviour Scale. Results: Higher preoperative attachment anxiety and avoidance were associated with lower self-esteem one year after bariatric surgery and poorer health self-efficacy two years after the surgery. Self-esteem and health self-efficacy mediated the relationships between preoperative anxious and avoidant attachment and 2- year post-operative diet adherence and physical activity. Conclusions: Helping patients to feel more worthy and reinforcing their beliefs about their own competences could lead to higher engagement with healthy lifestyle and adherence to treatment protocols, ultimately helping patients to achieve their goals for bariatric surgery. Clinical trial registration: BARIA: Netherlands Trial Register: NL5837 (NTR5992) https://www.trialregister.nl/trial/5837 . Diabaria: ClinicalTrials.gov identifier (NCT number): NCT03330756.</p

    Psychosocial determinants of lifestyle change after a cancer diagnosis: A systematic review of the literature

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    The aim of this study is to provide a systematic overview of the scientific literature on sociodemographic, psychological and social determinants that may facilitate or hamper lifestyle change after the diagnosis cancer. Four databases (PubMed, PsychINFO, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL), and Web of Science) were searched for relevant papers up to October 2021. Of the 9586 references yielded by the literature search, 123 papers were included: 71 quantitative and 52 qualitative papers. Findings showed a large variety of determinants influencing lifestyle change after cancer diagnosis, with differences between lifestyle behaviors (physical activity, diet, smoking, alcohol, sun protection, and multiple lifestyle behaviors) and findings from quantitative vs. qualitative studies. Findings demonstrate the important role of oncology healthcare professionals in promoting healthy lifestyle changes in cancer survivors. In addition, findings inform researchers involved in the development of health promotion programs about the methods and strategies they can use to promote healthy lifestyle changes in cancer survivors. Favorable lifestyle changes are expected to have beneficial effects on cancer risk and overall health in cancer survivors

    Interactive disparity map post-processing

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    Disparity estimation has been investigated for decades. Fully automatic methods have problems in texture-less regions, around object boundaries and in occlusions regions. In this paper, we exploit user input to address these problematic areas interactively. By drawing contours and polygons, we achieve sharp disparity discontinuities and smooth disparity planes in the disparity maps. Annotations are tracked quite accurately over a number of frames. Experimental results on Middlebury data set and our own stereo video suggest that the accuracy of disparity maps can be improved significantly with limited user input

    Interactive disparity map post-processing

    No full text
    \u3cp\u3eDisparity estimation has been investigated for decades. Fully automatic methods have problems in texture-less regions, around object boundaries and in occlusions regions. In this paper, we exploit user input to address these problematic areas interactively. By drawing contours and polygons, we achieve sharp disparity discontinuities and smooth disparity planes in the disparity maps. Annotations are tracked quite accurately over a number of frames. Experimental results on Middlebury data set and our own stereo video suggest that the accuracy of disparity maps can be improved significantly with limited user input.\u3c/p\u3

    Lower levels of trust in one's physician is associated with more distress over time in more anxiously attached individuals with cancer

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    Objective In the present study, we investigated individual differences in the outcome of patient–physician trust when confronted with cancer from an attachment theoretical perspective. We expected that lower levels of trust are associated with more emotional distress and more physical limitations within the first 15 months after diagnosis, especially in those who score relatively high on attachment anxiety. No such association was expected for more avoidantly attached individuals. Method A group of 119 patients with different types of cancer (breast, cervical, intestinal and prostate) completed questionnaires concerning trust (short version of the Wake Forest Physician Trust Scale) and attachment (Experiences in Close Relationship scale Revised) at 3 months after diagnosis. Emotional distress (Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale) and physical limitations (physical functioning subscales of the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer, Quality of Life Questionnaire-C30) were assessed at 3, 9 and 15 months after diagnosis. To test the hypotheses, multiple hierarchical regression analyses were performed. Results Lower levels of trust were associated with more emotional distress and more physical limitations at 3, 9 and 15 months after diagnosis in more anxiously attached patients, but not in less anxiously attached patients. Discussion These results indicate an attachment-dependent effect of trust in one's physician. Explanations and clinical implications are discussed

    The Significance of Attachment Representations for Quality of Life One Year Following Gastric Bypass Surgery: A Longitudinal Analysis

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    Background: Quality of life after bariatric surgery may, among other things, depend on patients' attachment representations such as anxiety about rejection and abandonment (attachment anxiety) and avoidance of intimacy and interdependence (attachment avoidance). The aim of this study was to examine whether attachment representations, independent of body mass index (BMI), are associated with the level and course of physical functioning and mental well-being after gastric bypass surgery. Method: A total of 131 patients applying for a Roux-en-Y gastric bypass operation agreed to participate in this longitudinal study. Patients' attachment representations (ECR-R) were measured before surgery, and quality of life dimensions (physical functioning and mental well-being, SF-36) were measured before surgery and 1, 3, 6, and 12 months following surgery. Linear mixed effect models were used in analyses. Results: Physical functioning (p <0.001) improved, and mental well-being worsened (p = 0.002) in the postoperative interval. Both attachment anxiety (p = 0.005) and attachment avoidance (p <0.001) were associated with a lower level of mental well-being, but not with the postoperative course of quality of life. Conclusions: Our study suggests that bariatric surgery leads to improvement in physical functioning but not mental well-being. Results highlight that patients with insecure attachment representations should be protected against unrealistic expectations regarding improvement of mental well-being after surgery
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