Expert answer:Read and evaluate the following research articles: Apply the concepts explored in the articles above by writing a 2-3 page paper in APA format using proper spelling and grammar. Your paper should address the following: see attached
read_and_evaluate_the_following_research_articles1.docx
contentserver__4_.pdf
contentserver__5_.pdf
Unformatted Attachment Preview
Read and evaluate the following research articles:
•
Rawdin, B., Evans, C., & Rabow, M. W. (2013). The relationships among hope, pain,
psychological distress, and spiritual well-being in oncology outpatients. Journal of Palliative
Medicine, 16(2), 167-172. doi:10.1089/jpm.2012.0223
Link to Article
•
Ferreira, V. M., & Sherman, A. M. (2007). The relationship of optimism, pain and social support to
well-being in older adults with osteoarthritis. Aging & Mental Health, 11(1), 89-98.
doi:10.1080/13607860600736166
Link to Article
Apply the concepts explored in the articles above by writing a 2-3 page paper in APA format using
proper spelling and grammar. Your paper should address the following:
1. Examine the concept of psychological well-being as it relates to the experience of pain and
stress.
2. Explore how optimism, hope, distress, and social support play a role in how people experience
pain and stress. Be sure to discuss how these elements of psychological well-being contribute to
overall physical and mental health.
3. Be sure to reference specific concepts from the articles. Use in-text citations and provide APA
formatted References as appropriate.
Please refer to Rasmussen’s APA Guide located on the Resourcestab for information
regarding APA format as well as APA referencing and citation procedures.
Submit your completed assignment to the drop box below. Please check the Course Calendar for
specific due dates.
Save your assignment as a Microsoft Word document. (Mac users, please remember to append the
“.docx” extension to the filename.) The name of the file should be your first initial and last name,
followed by an underscore and the name of the assignment, and an underscore and the date. An
example is shown below:
Jstudent_exampleproblem_101504
JOURNAL OF PALLIATIVE MEDICINE
Volume 16, Number 2, 2013
ª Mary Ann Liebert, Inc.
DOI: 10.1089/jpm.2012.0223
The Relationships among Hope, Pain, Psychological
Distress, and Spiritual Well-Being in Oncology Outpatients
Blake Rawdin, MD, MPH,1 Carrie Evans, MA,2 and Michael W. Rabow, MD 3
Abstract
Objective: Limited research in Taiwan and Europe suggest that hope is inversely correlated with certain dimensions of the pain experience. However, the relationship between hope and pain among oncology outpatients in the United States has not been evaluated. The aims of this study were to investigate the relationship
between hope and cancer pain, after accounting for key psychological, demographic, and clinical characteristics.
Design: We enrolled a convenience sample of 78 patients who were receiving concurrent oncologic and
symptom-focused care in a comprehensive cancer center. Patient demographic and clinical information was
obtained from patient report and medical record review. Patients completed the Herth Hope Index, the Brief
Pain Inventory, the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale, and the Steinhauser Spiritual Concern Probe.
Results: Levels of hope were not associated with age, gender, or the presence of metastatic disease. Herth Hope
Index scores were negatively correlated with average pain intensity (p = 0.02), worst pain intensity (p < 0.01),
pain interference with function (p < 0.05), anxiety (p < 0.01), and depression (p < 0.01), and were positively correlated with spiritual well-being scores (p < 0.01). However, after controlling for depression and spiritual wellbeing with regression analysis, the relationship between pain intensity and hope was no longer significant.
Conclusions: While an association exists between the patients’ experience of pain and levels of hope in this
study, adjustment for depression and spiritual well being eliminates the relationship initially observed.
Although the causal relationships have yet to be determined, in our study hope had a stronger connection to
psycho-spiritual factors, than to pain experiences or severity.
Introduction
M
aintaining hope in the face of serious illness has long
been a goal of patients, families, and clinicians. However, relatively little is known about the factors that sustain
hope.1,2 Even so, hope is a key clinical and perhaps therapeutic variable, affecting cancer patients’ adjustment and
coping skills, overall well-being, immune function, and
quality of life.3–10 Conversely, lack of hope and hopelessness
is associated with physical illness, depression, and wish to
hasten death.11,12 Therefore, developing greater understanding of the demographic and clinical factors that might be associated with or influence a patient’s degree of hope could
lead to strategies to identify patients at higher risk for hopelessness or factors that could be targeted by interventions to
improve hope and coping with cancer.
Defining and operationalizing hope is a complex endeavor
as the term has many different interpretations, meanings, and
usages. Qualitative investigations of hope within nursing lit-
erature have helped describe and define the concept in terms
of its sources, attributes, and goals. According to the
conceptual model developed by Dufault and Martocchio,
hope is a ‘‘multidimensional dynamic life force characterized by
a confident yet uncertain expectation of achieving a future good
which, to the hoping person, is realistically possible and
personally significant.’’ Furthermore, hope is described as a
‘‘complex of many thoughts, feelings, and actions that change
with time.’’ Based on extensive research, Dufault and Martocchio conceptualized hope as composed of two spheres,
‘‘generalized hope’’ and ‘‘particularized hope,’’ each consisting of six shared dimensions: cognitive, temporal, affective,
behavioral, affiliative, and contextual.13
As described in reviews by Butt14 and by Chi,15 a number of
studies have investigated the role of hope in different populations of cancer patients using qualitative and/or quantitative methods. Various instruments have been used to measure
hope, most common of which is the Hearth Hope Scale and its
more concise counterpart, the Herth Hope Index (HHI). Of the
1
Department of Psychiatry, 2School of Nursing, 3Division of General Internal Medicine, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco,
California.
Accepted September 21, 2012.
167
168
studies that have quantitatively assessed the relationship between hope and cancer pain, findings have varied.16–21 Some
research has evidenced direct negative correlations between
pain severity and hope.16,18,22 Other studies, however, show
no significant direct correlations between hope scores and
pain intensity or duration.17,20 For example, a cross-sectional
study of hospitalized cancer patients in Norway found HHI
scores correlated negatively with several of the interference
items on the Brief Pain Inventory (BPI), but not with pain
severity per se.20 A study investigating the association between pain and hope levels in hospitalized Taiwanese cancer
patients concluded that HHI scores did not differ between
patients with and without cancer pain. However, among
those patients with pain, hope levels correlated with patients’
beliefs about their pain symptoms rather than the pain itself
(i.e., pain duration, intensity, and relief), suggesting that
cognitive and emotional processing may mediate the relationship between pain and hope.17
To our knowledge, none of the studies focused on hope and
pain levels to date have included metrics of both psychological and spiritual well-being. According to Chochinov and
others, spirituality can play a significant role in maintaining
hope, and it has been recognized by the Institute of Medicine
as an important aspect of supportive care at end of life.22–25
Research has also provided empirical support for the hypothesis that spiritual well-being might help to bolster psychological functioning and adjustment to illness.15,26–28
Because the prior literature has delivered inconsistent results and primarily focused on inpatients, the goal of this
study was to examine the relationship between pain and hope
among oncologic outpatients, while also controlling for psycho-spiritual factors and other potentially significant clinical
and demographic variables. It was also important to evaluate
the relationship between hope and pain among patients in the
US, because prior published studies were set in Europe and
Asia.
RAWDIN ET AL.
The HHI is a 12-item score questionnaire that uses a 4-point
Likert scale to assess level of hope.29 The HHI, developed in
the oncology setting to operationalize and quantify hope for
research and clinical purposes, is based upon Dufault and
Martocchio’s conceptual framework of hope. Through psychometric validation studies using factor analysis, Herth successfully identified three subscales—temporality and future,
positive readiness and expectancy, and interconnectedness.
These three subscales correspond to the cognitive-temporal,
affective-behavioral, and affiliative-contextual dimensions
elucidated in the Dufault and Martocchio model.13 Total
HHI score ranges from 12 to 48 with higher scores corresponding to higher levels of hope. Overall scores provide a
validated and reliable measure of global hope for cancer patients with an alpha coefficient of 0.97 and a reliability coefficient of 0.91.29
The BPI is a valid and reliable scale for assessing both pain
intensity and pain interference with daily activities, using an
11-item questionnaire.30 The first part consists of four questions that addresses pain severity (where zero refers to ‘‘no
pain’’ and 10 to pain as ‘‘bad as you can imagine’’), whereas
the second part asks about pain interference with seven aspects of function (where zero refers to ‘‘does not interfere’’ and
10 to ‘‘completely interferes’’). The questionnaire in our study
was based on pain experienced over the past week, as in the
long version of the BPI.
The HADS is a tool designed for physically ill patients to
measure anxiety and depression. It avoids reliance on the
physical symptoms of psychiatric disease that result from the
physical illness itself. This 14-item scale has been widely
validated for use with cancer patients.31
The SSCP uses a 5-point Likert scale to evaluate a patient’s
sense of spiritual well-being by asking to what degree the
patient feels ‘‘at peace.’’ Higher scores signify greater spiritual
well-being. It has been validated as a screen for spiritual
distress, associated with both religious and meaning-making
elements of spirituality.32
Methods
Patients and setting
Patients (n = 78) were recruited from the Symptom Management Service (SMS), an oncologic outpatient consultation
service at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF)
Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center. Patients
were included if they were able to complete surveys in English, able to provide informed consent, were >18 years of
age, and had a diagnosis of cancer. Patients with diagnoses of
dementia or psychosis were excluded. Institutional Review
Board approval was received before data collection began.
Medical records were reviewed to confirm cancer diagnoses
and to investigate the presence of metastatic disease.
Study instruments
Patients were recruited in the SMS clinic waiting area. After
obtaining written informed consent, patients completed a
demographic questionnaire, the HHI, BPI, Hospital Anxiety
and Depression Scale (HADS), and Steinhauser Spiritual
Concern Probe (SSCP). We selected these measures based on
the frequency of their use in the literature, ease of administration, and construct validity and internal consistency
ratings.
Statistical analysis
Data analyses were conducted using SPSS for Mac Release
20.0.0 (SPSS, Inc., Chicago, IL). Descriptive statistics were
generated to assess the sample in terms of demographics and
clinical characteristics. Pearson’s product moment correlations between levels of hope and cancer pain intensity, anxiety, depression, spiritual well-being, and demographic
variables were determined. Based on the patient sample size,
the study achieved power to detect a moderate correlation
(r = 0.25–0.30) at 80% power.33 All tests were two-tailed with
an alpha = 0.05.
A multivariate linear regression model was constructed to
evaluate the effects of potential confounders that might systematically bias the association found between pain intensity
and HHI scores in the univariate analysis. Each of the variables of interest had skewness values less than twice their
standard errors, consistent with normal distributions. Hence,
we proceeded with parametric analyses. The dependent variable in the model was HHI score. The predictors were selected by including demographic and clinical variables
deemed important a priori (i.e., age, gender, education, marital status, religion, and the presence of metastatic disease),
then clinical predictor variables most highly correlated in the
HOPE, PAIN, DISTRESS, AND SPIRITUAL WELL-BEING IN ONCOLOGY OUTPATIENTS
169
univariate correlational analyses (HADS scores, SSCP score,
worst pain in the last week, and pain interference with mood
and function). Multicollinearity was assessed for these variables with the use of correlation matrices and variance inflation factors, as well as the possibility of interaction between
pain variables included in the model and depression scores.
The final model for the sake of parsimony retained only those
factors found to be statistically significant predictors with a p
value of < 0.05. An overall goodness of fit of the regression
model was calculated.
the study because they either did not meet the inclusion criteria (n = 4) or declined to participate (n = 7). In addition, six
surveys (6%) were not included in the sample because the
questionnaire was inadequately completed, whether due to
inadvertent omission of key survey elements (n = 2), patients’
time constraints (n = 2), or the patients’ feeling ‘‘too ill’’ to
continue (n = 2). Of the seven patients (7%) who declined to
participate, four did so out of concerns about privacy and/or
reluctance to participate in research more generally. The other
three cited feeling ‘‘too ill’’ or ‘‘too stressed-out.’’
Results
Demographic characteristics
Patient enrollment
The sample consisted of 64% women and 36% men with a
mean age of 57.6 years (standard deviation [SD] = 13.0)
(Table 1). Nearly 60% of the sample patients were between
the ages of 40 and 64; 32% were ‡ 65 years of age and 9%
were < 40. Representative of the SMS patient population,
69.2% of patients self-identified as white, 10.3% African
American, and 7.7% Asian. The sample patients were highly
educated with 83% having completed college or graduate
school. Over half (52.6%) of the sample patients were married or partnered. In terms of religious affiliation, 37.2%
identified as Christian, 14.1% as Jewish, 11.5% as Buddhist,
7.7% as other (usually denoted as ‘‘spiritual’’ by patients),
and 29.5% as ‘‘none.’’
From a convenience sample of SMS patients, 95 patients
were approached to participate and 78 (82%) agreed to participate, provided written informed consent, and completed
the questionnaires. Eleven patients (12%) were not enrolled in
Table 1. Descriptive Data for the Sample
Characteristic
Gender
Women
Men
Education
Middle school
High school
College
Graduate degree
Marital Status
Single
Married/partnered
Religion
Buddhist
Christian
Jewish
Hindu
Muslim
None
Other
Primary Cancer
Brain
Breast
Gastrointestinal
Gynecologic
Head/Neck
Hematologic
Lung
Other
Prostate
Urological
Age
age < 40
age 40-64
age 65 +
Metastatic Disease
No
Yes
Ever Had Pain Related
to Present Illness?
No
Yes
n
%
50
28
64.10%
35.90%
1
12
39
26
1.28%
15.38%
50.00%
33.33%
37
41
47.44%
52.56%
9
29
11
0
0
23
6
11.54%
37.18%
14.10%
0%
0%
29.49%
7.69%
3
22
3
13
8
2
5
5
12
5
3.85%
28.21%
3.85%
16.67%
10.26%
2.56%
6.41%
6.41%
15.38%
6.41%
7
46
25
8.97%
58.97%
32.05%
26
52
33.33%
66.67%
10
68
12.82%
87.18%
Clinical characteristics
The three most common cancer diagnoses were breast
(28.2%), gynecologic (16.7%), and prostate (15.4%), which is
reflective of the proportions within the SMS at large. Twothirds of the patients (66.7%) had metastatic disease.
The majority (87.2%) of the sample patients had pain due to
the cancer or its treatment. The mean pain score among those
with pain over the past week was 3.4 (SD = 2.5) (Table 2). The
mean level of pain at the time of the survey and at its worst
was 2.8 (SD = 2.7) and 4.7 (SD = 3.4), respectively. The mean
total HHI score was 38.2 (SD = 5.09). The mean level of spiritual well-being was 3.3 (SD = 1.01).
Patients had a mean score of 14.3 on the HADS (SD = 6.3)
with 6.6 on the depression subscale (SD = 3.5) and 7.7 on the
anxiety subscale (SD = 3.8). Nearly 50% of patients had scores
in the normal range on the HADS anxiety subscale, 28% had
borderline scores, and 23% had abnormal scores (Table 3). On
the HADS depression subscale, 56% of patients had levels in
the normal range, 31% of patients scored in the borderline
range, and 12% in the abnormal range.
Associations between levels of hope
and demographics, clinical characteristics,
symptoms, and spiritual well-being scores
Among the demographic variables (i.e., age, gender, ethnicity, marital status, religion, and education level), only education level showed a significant univariate correlation with
HHI scores (Table 3). Higher education level was associated
with higher HHI scores (r = 0.26, p = 0.02). HHI was not associated with the presence of metastatic disease.
Among pain variables, total HHI scores were negatively
correlated with ratings of worst pain over the last week (r =
- 0.28, p = 0.01), average pain over the last week (r = - 0.27,
p = 0.01), and with all BPI pain interference items except level
170
RAWDIN ET AL.
Table 2. Scores for Pain, Hope, Depression,
Anxiety, and Spiritual Well-Being
Table 4A. Initial Multivariate Linear Regression
Model for HHI Score
N Mean SD Min Max
BPI
Average Pain Over
the Last Week
Current Level of Pain
Worst Pain in Last Week
HHI
SSCP
HADS (Total Score)
HADS - Depression Subscale*
HADS - Anxiety Subscale*
78
3.38 2.45
0
9
78 2.79 2.68
78 4.67 3.35
78 38.22 5.09
77 3.32 1.01
77 14.28 6.33
77 7.66 3.84
77 6.62 3.5
0
0
28
1
2
0
1
9
10
48
5
31
15
16
*HADS subscale scores between 0 and 7 is ‘‘normal,’’ 8–10 is
‘‘borderline abnormal,’’ and 11–21 is ‘‘abnormal.’’
of interference with relationships: work (r = - 0.23, p = 0.04),
sleep (r = - 0.25, p = 0.03), enjoyment (r = - 0.25, p = 0.02),
ability to walk (r = - 0.28, p = 0.01), mood (r = - 0.33, p = 0.004),
and general function (r = - 0.28, p = 0.01).
Depression and anxiety each were negatively correlated
and spiritual well-being positively correlated with total HHI
scores with correlations of - 0.56, - 0.48, and 0.52, respectively, each with p values of < 0.001.
The multivariate linear regression models constructed to
predict HHI score (Table 4) indicate that spiritual well-being
scores and depression scores were statistically significant
predictors of hope. In the final model (Table 4B) SSCP score
had a b coefficient of 1.55 ( p < 0.01), and HADS depression
score had a b coefficient of - 0.63 ( p < 0.01). The overall adjusted R2 for the model was 0.38, p < 0.001. Pain intensity, BPI
Regression variables
ß (SE)
Age
Gender (0 = female; 1 = male)
Marital status (0 = single;
1 = married)
Metastatic cancer (0 = no; 1 = yes)
Any religious affiliation
(0 = no; 1 = yes)
Education (0-less than college;
1 = at least college degree)
Pain (worst in last week)
SSCP
HADS- Depression Score
HADS- Anxiety Score
Pain interference w/ general
function
Pain interference w/ mood
2
p-value
- 0.05 (0.04)
- 1.29 (1.04)
1.68 (1.00)
0.26
0.22
0.10
1.02 (1.03)
- 0.08 (1.10)
0.33
0.95
2.48 (1.43)
0.09
- 0.09
1.46
- 0.55
- 0.23
- 0.01
(0.23)
(0.62)
(0.16)
(0.19)
(0.26)
0.69
0.02
<0.01
0.24
0.97
0.16 (0.27)
0.57 ...
Purchase answer to see full
attachment
You will get a plagiarism-free paper and you can get an originality report upon request.
All the personal information is confidential and we have 100% safe payment methods. We also guarantee good grades
Delivering a high-quality product at a reasonable price is not enough anymore.
That’s why we have developed 5 beneficial guarantees that will make your experience with our service enjoyable, easy, and safe.
You have to be 100% sure of the quality of your product to give a money-back guarantee. This describes us perfectly. Make sure that this guarantee is totally transparent.
Read moreEach paper is composed from scratch, according to your instructions. It is then checked by our plagiarism-detection software. There is no gap where plagiarism could squeeze in.
Read moreThanks to our free revisions, there is no way for you to be unsatisfied. We will work on your paper until you are completely happy with the result.
Read moreYour email is safe, as we store it according to international data protection rules. Your bank details are secure, as we use only reliable payment systems.
Read moreBy sending us your money, you buy the service we provide. Check out our terms and conditions if you prefer business talks to be laid out in official language.
Read more