Abstract
ABSTRACT Numerous studies have shown the impact of lung cancer disease on patient quality of life (QoL), but no research has yet examined the impact of illness representations (IR) in the assessment of QoL in lung cancer. Our goal is to explore the role of IR as adeterminant of QoL for lung cancer patients. Data were collected from 162 French patients who completed aself-administered questionnaire including ageneric measure of QoL. It also contains aspecific measure of psychological distress, mental adjustment to cancer, and socio-demographic and medical data. Regression analysis revealed that consequences, treatment control, identity and understanding predicted QoL and the activity dimension of QoL. Perceived consequences and identity seemed to have adeleterious impact on QoL, while treatment control predicted abetter QoL, related to the level of psychological distress and education level. The results suggest the importance of considering IR as adeterminant of QoL. They corroborate earlier findings on the relationship between IR and QoL associated with other pathologies. Psychosocial variables appeared to have more impact on QoL than socio-demographic and clinical variables, which shows the importance of considering IR in order to improve the QoL of patients.
Published Version
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