The Role of Religion and Spirituality in Psychological Distress Prior to Surgery for Urologic Cancer

Author:

Biegler Kelly1,Cohen Lorenzo2,Scott Shellie2,Hitzhusen Katherine3,Parker Patricia2,Gilts Chelsea D.4,Canada Andrea5,Pisters Louis2

Affiliation:

1. University of California, Irvine, CA, USA

2. The University of Texas M D Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX, USA

3. Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, NC, USA

4. The University of Houston, Houston, TX, USA

5. Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, IL, USA

Abstract

The present study examined the associations between religion and spirituality (R/S), presurgical distress, and other psychosocial factors such as engagement coping, avoidant coping, and social support. Participants were 115 men scheduled for surgery for urologic cancer. Before surgery, participants completed scales measuring intrinsic religiosity, organized religious activity, and nonorganized religious activity (IR, ORA, NORA); social support (Medical Outcomes Study Social Support Survey); and distress (Impact of Event Scale [IES], Perceived Stress Scale [PSS], Brief Symptom Inventory-18 [BSI-18], and Profile of Mood States [POMS]). R/S was positively associated with engagement coping. Social support was positively associated with engagement coping and inversely associated with POMS and PSS scores. Engagement coping was positively associated with IES and BSI scores, and avoidant coping was positively associated with all distress measures. R/S moderated the association between engagement coping and IES scores, such that the association between engagement coping and IES was not significant for men with high R/S scores (greater religious belief). R/S moderated the association between social support and distress; the inverse association between social support and PSS and POMS scores was only significant for men who scored high on R/S. This study replicated findings from previous studies suggesting that engagement and avoidant types of coping can lead to increased distress prior to surgery. Although R/S was associated with engagement coping, it was not associated with any of the distress measures. The finding that R/S moderated the associations between engagement coping and distress and social support and distress suggests that the association between R/S, coping style, social support, and adjustment to stressful life situations is not simplistic, and indirect associations should be explored.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Complementary and alternative medicine,Oncology

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