Abstract :
Psychological distress in cancer patients is inversely related to age, although the
reasons are unclear. The adult development literature suggests that ageing may
be associated with the development of adaptive capacities, specifically greater
attachment security (the sense that others will be available and supportive when
needed) and spirituality (the capacity to view one’s life as having meaning, purpose
and value), that enable older people to cope better with disease. We examined
whether age-related patterns in attachment security and spiritual wellbeing
account for the protective effect of age against distress. Measures of depression,
attachment security, spiritual wellbeing and disease burden were collected from
342 patients aged from 21 to 88 years with advanced, metastatic cancer.
Attachment security and spiritual wellbeing were tested as mediators of the
effect of age on depression, controlling for disease burden. It was found that age
was associated inversely with depression and positively with spiritual wellbeing
and attachment security. Depression was inversely related to attachment security
and spiritual wellbeing, and the effect of age on depression was fully mediated
by attachment security and spiritual wellbeing. The relative protection from
psychological distress among older cancer patients may be the result of agerelated
developmental accomplishments and/or differences in the response to
adverse life-events.
Keywords :
attachment , depression , JUDY LIN , adult development , advanced cancer , ageing , spirituality