Life goals and purpose in life in cancer patients

2008 ◽  
Vol 17 (3) ◽  
pp. 253-259 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martin Pinquart ◽  
Rainer K. Silbereisen ◽  
Cornelia Fröhlich
2020 ◽  
Vol 76 ◽  
pp. 01004
Author(s):  
Dewi Astuti

This study investigates whether the ownership of a retirement program is owned only by those who have a purpose in life in old age or also owned by those who focus on working well now and do not have a purpose in life in old age. The study population is employees, and entrepreneurs who have worked, with sample criteria have a steady income with a specific educational background. The number of samples is 52 respondents. The result revealed that having the purpose of life in old age, and focusing on the purpose of life at the moment encourage someone to have a pension program. The results of the study stated that the effect of the independent variables on the dependent variable appeared weak. The independent variable "has the purpose of old age life" and the independent variable "focus on life goals current" can explain 0.69 % of the dependent variable "has retirement fund program.


2021 ◽  
pp. 002216782110418
Author(s):  
P. F. Jonah Li ◽  
Y. Joel Wong ◽  
Ryon C. McDermott

How does having purpose in life help people develop successful routes to achieve their life goals? The authors address this question in the current study by examining the relationships among U.S. college students’ purpose in life, resilience, and pathways thinking, defined as the belief that one can successfully generate plans to achieve one’s life goals. Purpose in life was positively associated with resilience and pathways. Moreover, a mediation analysis revealed that purpose in life was indirectly associated with pathways via its correlation with pathways. Based on the findings, the authors outlined a theoretical framework that explains the role of purpose in life in people’s psychological functioning.


2012 ◽  
Vol 20 (11) ◽  
pp. 2775-2783 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Brunelli ◽  
E. Bianchi ◽  
L. Murru ◽  
P. Monformoso ◽  
M. Bosisio ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Erin Michelle Buchanan ◽  
Riley E. Foreman ◽  
Becca Nicole Huber ◽  
Jeffrey Michael Pavlacic ◽  
Rachel N. Swadley ◽  
...  

Scales that are psychometrically sound, meaning those that meet established standards regarding reliability and validity when measuring one or more constructs of interest, are customarily evaluated based on a set modality (i.e., computer or paper) and administration (fixed-item order). Deviating from an established administration profile could result in non-equivalent response patterns, indicating the possible evaluation of a dissimilar construct. Randomizing item administration may alter or eliminate these effects. Therefore, we examined the differences in scale relationships for randomized and nonrandomized computer delivery for two scales measuring meaning/purpose in life. These scales have questions about suicidality, depression, and life goals that may cause item reactivity (i.e. a changed response to a second item based on the answer to the first item). Results indicated that item randomization does not alter scale psychometrics for meaning in life scales, which implies that results are comparable even if researchers implement different delivery modalities.


2002 ◽  
Vol 36 (6) ◽  
pp. 733-742 ◽  
Author(s):  
David M. Clarke ◽  
David W. Kissane

Objective: Demoralization, as described by Jerome Frank, is experienced as a persistent inability to cope, together with associated feelings of helplessness, hopelessness, meaninglessness, subjective incompetence and diminished self-esteem. It is arguably the main reason people seek psychiatric treatment, yet is a concept largely ignored in psychiatry. The aim here is to review and summarize the literature pertaining to demoralization in order to examine the validity of the construct. Method: A narrative review of demoralization and the related concepts of hope, hopelessness, and meaning is presented, drawing on a range of empirical and observational studies in the medical and psychiatric literature. Results: An examination of the concepts of the ‘Giving Up–Given Up’ syndrome (George Engel), ‘suffering’ (Eric Cassell), and demoralization (Jerome Frank), demonstrate considerable convergence of ideas. Demoralization has been commonly observed in the medically and psychiatrically ill and is experienced as existential despair, hopelessness, helplessness, and loss of meaning and purpose in life. Although sharing symptoms of distress, demoralization is distinguished from depression by subjective incompetence in the former and anhedonia in the latter. Demoralization can occur in people who are depressed, cancer patients who are not depressed and those with schizophrenia. Hopelessness, the hallmark of demoralization, is associated with poor outcomes in physical and psychiatric illness, and importantly, with suicidal ideation and the wish to die. Conclusions: Demoralization is an important construct with established descriptive and predictive validity. A place needs to be found for it in psychiatric nomenclature.


2017 ◽  
Vol 35 (31_suppl) ◽  
pp. 177-177
Author(s):  
Ann Marie Dose ◽  
Pamela J McCabe ◽  
Jeff A. Sloan

177 Background: Dignity Therapy (DT) is a psychosocial intervention used primarily at the end of life to improve quality of life and promote patient dignity, but many individuals are unable to complete it due to health decline/death. In addition, when individuals face potential mortality, they evaluate life plans to determine tasks and behaviors most important to them. Consistent with guidelines to provide palliative care interventions simultaneously with cancer treatment, the purpose of this study was to evaluate initial patient-reported outcomes of an intervention combination (Dignity Therapy + Life Plan [DT/LP]) for those with advanced pancreatic or lung cancer receiving treatment within a year of diagnosis. Methods: This was a single-arm, Phase I/II pilot study, conducted in the outpatient setting at an NCI-designated comprehensive cancer center. Dignity Therapy consisted of a focused life review intervention delivered during three outpatient oncology encounters for each patient. Interviews were audiotaped, transcribed, and edited to produce a legacy document. Participants scribed a list of 3-6 life goals for the LP intervention. Outcomes measured at baseline, immediately post DT/LP, and 3 months later were distress (Distress Thermometer), quality of life (FACT and LASA), spirituality (FaCIT-Sp-12), dignity (Patient Dignity Inventory), and purpose in life (Purpose in Life Test- Short Form). Data were analyzed with one-sample, two-sided t-tests (alternate: Wilcoxan). Results: Eighteen advanced pancreatic or lung cancer patients enrolled, mean age 64. There were no significant differences among all variables from baseline to post-DT/LP and 3 months later, with the exception of less distress experienced between baseline and 3 months after DT/LP ( p= 0.04). Conclusions: The DT/LP intervention did not show improvements in these psychosocial outcomes, but patients with advanced cancer typically experience worsening physical and psychosocial symptoms with active treatment. Therefore, maintaining these outcomes from baseline is a worthy goal, as we may be preventing further morbidity in an advanced cancer population. Further research is needed, however, given this small sample size. Clinical trial information: NCT02132325.


Author(s):  
Albert Kamp ◽  
Zarah Bood ◽  
Michael Scherer-Rath ◽  
Yvonne Weeseman ◽  
Nirav Christophe ◽  
...  

Abstract Purpose Patients with advanced cancer can experience their disease as a contingent life event. The sudden interruption of their life stories can obscure life goals and disrupt meaning making. In the context of the research project “In search of stories,” we aim to investigate the reading and discussion of selected stories which present ways of dealing with a contingent life event. In addition, we examine the use of a newly developed guide for reading these exemplary texts together with advanced cancer patients. Methods This qualitative study describes the experiences of five patients with advanced cancer who participated in a guided reading and discussion about selected literary texts. The intervention consisted of reading a selected story, after which each patient was interviewed, using the reading guide as a conversation template. The interviews were then thematically analyzed for their conceptual content using a template analysis. Results All five conversations showed some form of recognition in reaction to the chosen text, which led to personal identification of experiences of contingency, such as loss of life goals, impending death, or feelings of uncertainty. Besides the important role of identification, revealed by the responses to the questions in the reading guide, the discussion of the text helped them articulate their own experience and sources of meaning. Diverse worldviews came to the fore and concepts of meaning such as fate, life goals, quality of life, and death. Conclusions First experiences with our newly developed reading guide designed to support a structured reading of stories containing experiences of contingency suggest that it may help patients to express their own experiences of contingency and to reflect on these experiences. Implications for Cancer Survivors The intervention tested in this study may contribute to supportive care for survivors with advanced cancer, but further research is needed to evaluate its effect on quality of life.


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