Perceived risk, trust and health-related quality of life among cancer survivors

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Abstract

Background To design effective interventions that improve cancer survivors' health-related quality of life (HRQoL), it is necessary to understand how HRQoL is related to cancer cognitions and interpersonal/social factors. Purpose This study investigated whether perceived risk of recurrence is associated with HRQoL and whether trust in the follow-up care physician moderates the perceived risk/HRQoL relationship. Method A cross-sectional survey of cancer survivors (N=408). Results Higher perceived risk was associated with worse mental and physical HRQoL. Higher trust was associated with better mental (but not physical) HRQoL. The inverse association between perceived risk and mental HRQoL was eliminated among those with high trust in their physicians. Trust did not moderate the perceived risk/physical HRQoL relationship. Conclusions Addressing survivors' perceived risk of recurrence and improving the provider-patient relationship may enhance interventions to improve mental HRQoL among cancer survivors. However, the causal relationships among the constructs should be explicated. © The Society of Behavioral Medicine 2010.

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APA

Waters, E. A., Arora, N. K., Klein, W. M. P., & Han, P. K. J. (2010). Perceived risk, trust and health-related quality of life among cancer survivors. Annals of Behavioral Medicine, 39(1), 91–97. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12160-010-9163-y

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