Posttraumatic stress and attentional bias towards cancer-related stimuli in parents of children recently diagnosed with cancer

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Abstract

Objectives To investigate whether posttraumatic stress symptoms (PTSS) are related to attentional bias towards cancer-related stimuli among parents of children recently diagnosed with cancer. Methods Sixty-two parents completed questionnaires measuring PTSS, depression, and anxiety and the emotional Stroop task via the Internet. The emotional Stroop task included cancerrelated words, cardiovascular disease-related words, and neutral words. Results Participants were split in two groups based on the median of PTSS: High-PTSS and Low-PTSS. There was a significant interaction between word-type and group and a planned contrast test of this interaction indicated that the High-PTSS group had longer response latencies on cancer-related words compared to the other word-type and group combinations. Conclusions Findings suggest that PTSS are related to attentional bias towards cancer-related stimuli among parents of children recently diagnosed with cancer. Implications of this finding for the understanding of PTSS in this population, future research, and clinical practice are discussed.

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APA

Cernvall, M., Hovén, E., Ljungman, L., Ljungman, G., Carlbring, P., & Von Essen, L. (2016). Posttraumatic stress and attentional bias towards cancer-related stimuli in parents of children recently diagnosed with cancer. PLoS ONE, 11(4). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0152778

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