Advanced Prostate Cancer Patients’ Ways of Coping with the Hormonal Therapy’s Effect on Body, Sexuality, and Spousal Ties
- 1 December 2003
- journal article
- other
- Published by SAGE Publications in Qualitative Health Research
- Vol. 13 (10) , 1378-1392
- https://doi.org/10.1177/1049732303258016
Abstract
The authors examine the coping strategies employed by advanced prostate cancer patients receiving hormonal therapy to learn from their experience about potential solutions to their nonmedical needs. The study was based on in-depth interviews with 15 such patients and data analysis by the constant comparative method. The main psychosocial difficulties detected were patients’ bodily feminization, sexual dysfunction, and disruption of spousal intimacy. Participants contended with these difficulties through disguise, diversion, and avoidance strategies applied in social interactions, and through self-redefining, self-distancing, and self-solacing cognitive tactics. The analysis of these coping techniques clarifies the motives behind their adoption by the participants, their changing patterns over time, their advantages and disadvantages, and the potential that understanding these issues possesses for improving interventions aimed at alleviating patients’ difficulties.Keywords
This publication has 34 references indexed in Scilit:
- Prostate cancer: embodied experience and perceptions of masculinitySociology of Health & Illness, 2002
- Married couples' perspectives on prostate cancer diagnosis and treatment decision‐makingPsycho‐Oncology, 2001
- To tell or not to tell: patterns of disclosure among men with prostate cancerPsycho‐Oncology, 2000
- Towards a Sociology of Transgendered BodiesSociological Review, 1999
- Prostate Cancer and Emotional FunctioningJournal of Psychosocial Oncology, 1999
- SUPPORTIVE CARE, PAIN MANAGEMENT, AND QUALITY OF LIFE IN ADVANCED PROSTATE CANCERUrologic Clinics of North America, 1999
- Dimensions of quality of life expressed by men treated for metastatic prostate cancerSocial Science & Medicine, 1997
- How is quality of life in prostate cancer patients influenced by modern treatment? the wallenberg symposiumUrology, 1997
- Couples' adjustment to one partner's disability: The relationship between sense of coherence and adjustmentSocial Science & Medicine, 1996
- An Alternative Group ApproachJournal of Psychosocial Oncology, 1993