advertising Subscribe Newsletter About Us Home

 

Current Issue
Exclusives
Daily News
Datebook
Recipes


Editorial Calendar
Advisory Board
Writers' Guidelines
Contact Us


To be seventy years young is sometimes far more cheerful and hopeful than to
be forty years old.”

Oliver Wendell Holmes (1841-1935)



Home » Daily News

March 21 - Treating Wife’s Stress May Be Indirect Care for Men With Prostate Cancer

When a couple is dealing with cancer, a partner’s psychological distress might drag down the well-being of either person, according to a new study of 168 married couples. “Whether it is my own or my partner’s, psychological distress may impact my quality of life,” says lead researcher Youngmee Kim, director of Family Studies at the American Cancer Society’s Behavioral Research Center in Atlanta.

The physical health of husbands seemed to be especially vulnerable to the poor emotional well-being of their wives. “We found an interesting pattern. The psychological distress of the female partner seemed to have the greatest effect—whether the woman was the breast cancer survivor or the caregiver of a man with prostate cancer. If the female has higher level of psychological distress, the male partner will have higher level of psychosomatic problems,” Kim says. The study appears in a recent issue of the Annals of Behavioral Medicine.

All of the couples in the study were male-female pairs. In all cases, one of the partners had received a breast or prostate cancer diagnosis about two years before participating in American Cancer Society surveys, from which the new study data were drawn. In the survey, husbands with wives under high stress rarely reported psychological or emotional problems.

“Men tend not to say that psychological stress associated with cancer diagnosis and treatment is a problem, but they tend to somatize those stresses, reporting headaches, backaches. Maybe men are not conditioned or socialized to express those touchy feelings. They tend to show those feelings—let them come out—through their body,” Kim says.

Kim and her colleagues said their study could be a starting point for identifying groups of people who might benefit from programs designed to improve coping skills or reduce stress. In particular, helping women manage psychological stress might improve the mental and physical health of both partners dealing with cancer, Kim says. “Often in clinical practice, we only pay attention to the patient or survivor—try to improve their distress. But beyond focusing on the patient—in addition to treating the survivor’s stress—we need to include or pay attention to caregiving wives. That will impact the patient. It’s indirect care,” Kim says.

“People are starting to understand that some cancers can be seen as a couples’ disease,” says Frank Penedo, an associate professor in the Division of Bio-behavioral Oncology and Cancer Control at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine. “The males’ perception of how well they function physically in some ways depends on the support they get from their partner.”

Source: Health Behavior News Service



 

 

(View the Daily News Archive)



Copyright © 2008 Great Valley Publishing Co., Inc.
3801 Schuylkill Rd • Spring City, PA 19475
Publishers of Aging Well
All rights reserved.