Affiliation:
1. Department of Psychology Indiana University‐Purdue University Indianapolis Indianapolis Indiana USA
2. Seattle Division VA Puget Sound Health Care System Seattle Washington USA
3. Department of Medicine Indiana University School of Medicine Indianapolis Indiana USA
4. Center for Health Services Research Regenstrief Institute Indianapolis Indiana USA
Abstract
AbstractObjectiveA brief, valid, and comprehensive measure of mindfulness is needed for cancer populations. This study examined the factor structure, internal consistency, construct validity, and measurement invariance of the 10‐item Cognitive Affective Mindfulness Scale‐Revised (CAMS‐R) in patients with cancer.MethodsPatients with breast, gastrointestinal, lung, or prostate cancer (N = 404, 50% stage IV cancer, 51% women) were recruited from academic and public clinics in Indianapolis, IN. Patients completed the CAMS‐R and other psychological measures at one time point. Confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) was used to examine the dimensionality of the CAMS‐R. Internal consistency and construct validity were also assessed. Measurement invariance was examined for gender, cancer type, and cancer stage.ResultsCFA showed that the original CAMS‐R structure with four first‐order factors (attention, present focus, awareness, and acceptance) and one second‐order factor (mindfulness) had a reasonable fit (RMSEA = 0.09, CFI = 0.95, SRMR = 0.04). Internal consistency was excellent (α = 0.90). The CAMS‐R total score showed significant positive associations with several subscales of a widely used mindfulness questionnaire and self‐compassion (rs = 0.61–0.66) and significant negative associations with anxiety, depressive symptoms, rumination, psychological inflexibility, and avoidant coping (rs = −0.35–0.58). Measurement invariance testing indicated that the CAMS‐R was invariant across populations of varying genders, cancer types, and stages.ConclusionsFindings provide preliminary support for using the CAMS‐R in cancer populations. Future research should assess the responsiveness of the CAMS‐R to intervention.
Funder
National Cancer Institute
Walther Cancer Foundation
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Oncology,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology