Author: Cheli, Simone; Lam, Wendy W. T.; Estapé, Tania; Winterling, Jeanette; Bahcivan, Ozan; Andritsch, Elisabeth; Weis, Joachim; Centeno, Isabel; Serpentini, Samantha; Farkas, Clemens; Wengström, Yvonne; Fioretto, Luisa; Baider, Lea; Lam, Cherry C. L.; Goldzweig, Gil
Title: Risk perception, treatment adherence, and personality during COVIDâ€19 pandemic: An international study on cancer patients Cord-id: pnq51nlc Document date: 2021_8_4
ID: pnq51nlc
Snippet: OBJECTIVE: To explore the role of personality traits in moderating the relation between COVIDâ€19 risk perception and treatment adherence, and between risk perception and psychosocial distress in patients diagnosed with cancer. METHODS: An online survey (n = 1281) was conducted worldwide in seven countries (Austria, Germany, Hong Kong, Italy, Spain, Sweden, and Turkey). Inclusion criteria were to be 18 years of age or older, have received a cancer diagnosis, and be in treatment or followâ€up.
Document: OBJECTIVE: To explore the role of personality traits in moderating the relation between COVIDâ€19 risk perception and treatment adherence, and between risk perception and psychosocial distress in patients diagnosed with cancer. METHODS: An online survey (n = 1281) was conducted worldwide in seven countries (Austria, Germany, Hong Kong, Italy, Spain, Sweden, and Turkey). Inclusion criteria were to be 18 years of age or older, have received a cancer diagnosis, and be in treatment or followâ€up. A few moderated regression models were performed with both personality traits and Hierarchical Taxonomy of Psychopathology superâ€spectra as moderators. RESULTS: Detachment, negative affectivity, psychoticism and all the superâ€spectra significantly moderated the relation between coronavirus risk perception and psychosocial distress, after the adjusting effect of confidence in safeguards. Only negative affectivity moderated the association between coronavirus risk perception and treatment adherence. CONCLUSIONS: Personality traits may foster the understanding of how a patient might adjust to cancer treatment and, more generically, to highly stressful events such as the COVIDâ€19 pandemic. Further research is needed to confirm the results in different cancer stages and types.
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