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Role, race, and place: Prostate cancer disparities in Patients' and Partners' health outcomes and psychosocial factors

PURPOSE: This study aimed to examine the effects of participant role (patient vs. partner), race (white vs. non‐white), and place (less vs. more neighborhood deprivation) on health outcomes (quality of life [QOL] and symptoms) and stress‐coping‐related psychosocial factors (appraisals of illness and...

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Autores principales: Song, Lixin, Keyserling, Thomas C., Chen, Ronald C., Ma, Chunxuan, Xu, Shenmeng, Shieh, Karl, Fuller, Gail P., Nielsen, Matthew E., Northouse, Laurel L., Tan, Xianming, Rini, Christine
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10166971/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36748581
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cam4.5646
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author Song, Lixin
Keyserling, Thomas C.
Chen, Ronald C.
Ma, Chunxuan
Xu, Shenmeng
Shieh, Karl
Fuller, Gail P.
Nielsen, Matthew E.
Northouse, Laurel L.
Tan, Xianming
Rini, Christine
author_facet Song, Lixin
Keyserling, Thomas C.
Chen, Ronald C.
Ma, Chunxuan
Xu, Shenmeng
Shieh, Karl
Fuller, Gail P.
Nielsen, Matthew E.
Northouse, Laurel L.
Tan, Xianming
Rini, Christine
author_sort Song, Lixin
collection PubMed
description PURPOSE: This study aimed to examine the effects of participant role (patient vs. partner), race (white vs. non‐white), and place (less vs. more neighborhood deprivation) on health outcomes (quality of life [QOL] and symptoms) and stress‐coping‐related psychosocial factors (appraisals of illness and coping resources). METHODS: This descriptive study included 273 patients and their partners (dyads) who transitioned from PCa treatment to self‐management. We used established, psychometrically sound measures to assess health outcomes and psychosocial factors and conducted multilevel modeling analyses. RESULTS: Compared to partners, patients reported worse physical QOL; less frequent anxiety; less pain and fatigue; less bothersome hormonal problems; more bothersome urinary and sexual problems; greater self‐efficacy; and more instrumental support. Compared to their white counterparts, non‐white dyads reported better overall, emotional, and functional QOL; less depression; more positive appraisals, and greater self‐efficacy. Compared to dyads in low ADI neighborhoods, dyads in high ADI (more deprived) neighborhoods reported worse social QOL; more bothersome urinary, sexual, and hormonal symptoms; and less interpersonal support. White patients reported the highest emotional support among all groups, while white partners reported the lowest emotional support. CONCLUSION: Our findings underscore the need to consider social determinants of health at multiple levels when investigating PCa disparities. Considering neighborhood‐level socioeconomic factors, in addition to race and role, improves our understanding of the PCa disparities in QOL, symptoms, and psychosocial factors among patients and partners. Targeted multilevel supportive care interventions should tailor to the needs of racially diverse PCa patients and partners residing in deprived neighborhoods are needed.
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spelling pubmed-101669712023-05-10 Role, race, and place: Prostate cancer disparities in Patients' and Partners' health outcomes and psychosocial factors Song, Lixin Keyserling, Thomas C. Chen, Ronald C. Ma, Chunxuan Xu, Shenmeng Shieh, Karl Fuller, Gail P. Nielsen, Matthew E. Northouse, Laurel L. Tan, Xianming Rini, Christine Cancer Med RESEARCH ARTICLES PURPOSE: This study aimed to examine the effects of participant role (patient vs. partner), race (white vs. non‐white), and place (less vs. more neighborhood deprivation) on health outcomes (quality of life [QOL] and symptoms) and stress‐coping‐related psychosocial factors (appraisals of illness and coping resources). METHODS: This descriptive study included 273 patients and their partners (dyads) who transitioned from PCa treatment to self‐management. We used established, psychometrically sound measures to assess health outcomes and psychosocial factors and conducted multilevel modeling analyses. RESULTS: Compared to partners, patients reported worse physical QOL; less frequent anxiety; less pain and fatigue; less bothersome hormonal problems; more bothersome urinary and sexual problems; greater self‐efficacy; and more instrumental support. Compared to their white counterparts, non‐white dyads reported better overall, emotional, and functional QOL; less depression; more positive appraisals, and greater self‐efficacy. Compared to dyads in low ADI neighborhoods, dyads in high ADI (more deprived) neighborhoods reported worse social QOL; more bothersome urinary, sexual, and hormonal symptoms; and less interpersonal support. White patients reported the highest emotional support among all groups, while white partners reported the lowest emotional support. CONCLUSION: Our findings underscore the need to consider social determinants of health at multiple levels when investigating PCa disparities. Considering neighborhood‐level socioeconomic factors, in addition to race and role, improves our understanding of the PCa disparities in QOL, symptoms, and psychosocial factors among patients and partners. Targeted multilevel supportive care interventions should tailor to the needs of racially diverse PCa patients and partners residing in deprived neighborhoods are needed. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2023-02-07 /pmc/articles/PMC10166971/ /pubmed/36748581 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cam4.5646 Text en © 2023 The Authors. Cancer Medicine published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle RESEARCH ARTICLES
Song, Lixin
Keyserling, Thomas C.
Chen, Ronald C.
Ma, Chunxuan
Xu, Shenmeng
Shieh, Karl
Fuller, Gail P.
Nielsen, Matthew E.
Northouse, Laurel L.
Tan, Xianming
Rini, Christine
Role, race, and place: Prostate cancer disparities in Patients' and Partners' health outcomes and psychosocial factors
title Role, race, and place: Prostate cancer disparities in Patients' and Partners' health outcomes and psychosocial factors
title_full Role, race, and place: Prostate cancer disparities in Patients' and Partners' health outcomes and psychosocial factors
title_fullStr Role, race, and place: Prostate cancer disparities in Patients' and Partners' health outcomes and psychosocial factors
title_full_unstemmed Role, race, and place: Prostate cancer disparities in Patients' and Partners' health outcomes and psychosocial factors
title_short Role, race, and place: Prostate cancer disparities in Patients' and Partners' health outcomes and psychosocial factors
title_sort role, race, and place: prostate cancer disparities in patients' and partners' health outcomes and psychosocial factors
topic RESEARCH ARTICLES
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10166971/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36748581
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cam4.5646
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