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Fear of Recurrence

Norma Lee MA, MD, LMFT February 24, 2013. Fear of Recurrence. What we think, we become. All that we are arises with our thoughts. With our thoughts, we make the world. The Buddha.

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Fear of Recurrence

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  1. Norma Lee MA, MD, LMFT February 24, 2013 Fear of Recurrence

  2. What we think, we become.All that we are arises with our thoughts. With our thoughts, we make the world.The Buddha

  3. God, grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, the courage to change the things I can, and the wisdom to know the difference.Reinhold Neibuhr

  4. Outline Fear of Recurrence Psychiatric Considerations Effects of Social Support Effects of Coping Style Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Techniques Mindfulness Based Practices Homework

  5. Is Fear All Bad? • Beliefs/rules about the world either protect you from or make you more vulnerable to emotional distress • Too much fear means less problem solving ability • Some degree of FOR helps people to maintain medical follow up

  6. Self-Regulation Model of Illness Every person has an illness representation based on somatic experiences/sensations With an illness threat, cognitive and emotional processing systems tell the person how to act If experiences/sensations are based on inaccurate information, the person’s illness representation may be false

  7. Self-Regulation Model of Illness • May cause them to feel unnecessarily worried, anxious or fearful • If illness representation makes sense to person then they consider coping strategy to be appropriate • When looking at coping strategies, must consider person’s illness representation, previous experiences and world view

  8. Fear of Recurrence • Quality of physician communication during initial diagnosis/initiation of treatment is a critical determinant of subsequent psychological well being • Not consistently related to time since diagnosis • Concerns and worries may persist long term

  9. Fear of Recurrence • Younger women more concerned about: • Potential disfigurement • Loss of femininity, disability • Feeling different or isolated • Distress associated with treatment

  10. Fear of Recurrence • Younger women’s concerns: • Physical and mental quality of life • Perceived amount of impairment • Chemotherapy • Having children

  11. Psychiatric Impact • Prevalence of psychiatric disorders 22-47% • 4% of women with all stages of breast cancer met criteria for PTSD • 41% had subsyndromal criteria • Intense fear • Helplessness • Horror after being diagnosed

  12. PTSD • Other signs of PTSD • Intrusive thoughts • Avoidance • Hyperarousal • PTSD symptoms correlated most significantly with: • Lymphedema • Numbness in hands, feet or chest • Other physical problems

  13. Depression & Anxiety • 19% had depression • Almost 100% had some level of anxiety • Depression/anxiety levels affected by: • Being unaccompanied by spouse/partner to follow up visits • Not having someone to share problems with • Request to see a mental health provider • Using an alternative treatment

  14. What Impacts Depression & Anxiety Levels? • Sleep • Emotional Status • Fatigue • Body Appearance • Sense of Hopelessness • Uncertainty about the future

  15. Why Depression is Harmful • Strong association between helplessness and hopelessness, depression and shortened survival • Depression makes the odds of not following a treatment plan three times higher • Conversely, social support and a cohesive family improve the odds of compliance with medical care

  16. Why Depression is Harmful • Persistently depressed women may be at risk of not only poor QOL but also premature death • They should be promptly referred for a mental health assessment • Quick screen: Do you feel depressed? • Do things seem hopeless to you?

  17. When to Consider Therapy • Your usual problem solving techniques and coping skills aren’t working • You feel stuck • You need someone who will just listen • You feel like you’re going crazy • TALKING TO A THERAPIST DOES NOT MEAN YOU ARE WEAK OR HAVE A CHARACTER FLAW!!

  18. Considering Medication • You are having significant difficulty getting through the day • Consistently crying a lot • Consistently too anxious to do what needs to get done • Feeling suicidal

  19. Therapy vs. Medication • Medication works faster • Longer term outcomes are best with combination of medication and therapy • Therapy teaches people skills they can use forever • Distress may not be completely related to cancer; therapy explores that

  20. Social Support • Significant impact on quality of life • Women with high levels of support had no meaningful impact on their QOL when they had cancer related intrusive thoughts • For women with low levels of support, the relationship between cancer related intrusive thoughts and QOL was significant and negative

  21. Social Support • Women with fewer sources of support have more fear of recurrence • Feeling understood by loved ones help women to monitor their thoughts about recurrence • Proximity to a loved one has a regulatory effect on emotional functioning and helps to control emotional and physiological responses to stressors

  22. Self-Efficacy • A person’s belief about his or her ability and capacity to accomplish a task or to deal with the challenges of life • Self-efficacy is a significant predictor of an active adjustment style and emotional well-being

  23. Coping & Coping Styles • Coping styles are learned, usually from one’s family of origin • Related to illness representation • Prior traumatic and/or current stressful life event can adversely affect one’s ability to cope

  24. Adaptive Coping • Active coping and problem-solving techniques result in better mood and adaptation • Flexibility in coping styles is crucial • Women who use available social resources and support adapt better and may live longer than women who don’t

  25. Adaptive Coping • Internal locus of control • Proactive vs. reactive • Knowing what you can control (you) and what you cannot (everyone else) • Acceptance of responsibility • Escape-avoidance

  26. Maladaptive Coping • Women who are passive or feel hopeless or pessimistic are rigid in their coping style; may become isolated and reject help when it is offered and adapt more poorly • Factors significantly associated with a high or moderate FOR include a depressive and a problem-oriented coping style (vs. an affective-oriented coping style)

  27. Maladaptive Coping • Internal and external cues can contribute to fear of recurrence • Somatic • Friends/family • Women who believe they are at risk of recurrence will be emotionally activated by neutral stimuli

  28. What Can Be Done To Help? • Women who received an intervention designed to improve knowledge or coping or to reduce distress did better than those who didn’t • Less anxiety/depression, increased sense of control, improved body image, better sexual function, greater satisfaction with care, improved medication adherence

  29. Support Groups • Increasing evidence that participation in group activity offers a uniquely supportive and normalizing experience for many people • Group therapy has the ability to enrich QOL and help to prevent onset of depression • Added benefit with professional facilitator

  30. Meaning Making Study • Routine care vs. four sessions that explored meaning of thoughts and feelings regarding one’s cancer experience within the context of past events and future goals • Significantly higher levels of self-esteem, optimism and self-efficacy in meaning making group

  31. Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy (CBT) • Our thoughts (cognitions) influence how we feel (emotions) and how we act (behaviors) • It is not the cancer itself that produces the emotional response, but rather the meaning of the cancer to that person

  32. Principles of CBT • We all have automatic thoughts that are based on experiences, not on reality • When people are anxious, two things occur: • They overestimate that something bad will happen • They assume the worst • This is distorted thinking

  33. How CBT Works • Cognitive reframing: for thoughts to be valid, they must be based in reality • Goal is to have people develop the ability to view a situation objectively • Is there another way to look at the situation? • What is the worst thing that could happen? • Could you handle it?

  34. Principles of CBT • Relaxation techniques are a crucial part of cognitive-behavioral therapy • The ability to relax when starting to feel anxious makes people confident that they can cope with other stressful situations • The ability to relax allows for clearer thinking when problem solving

  35. Principles of CBT • Exposure to feared situations is essential • Without exposure, people are able to continue with distorted thinking which only serves to increase behavioral and cognitive avoidance

  36. Mind/Body Practices • Variety of techniques designed to enhance the mind’s capacity to influence bodily functions and symptoms. Examples: • Relaxation, hypnosis, visual imagery, biofeedback • Therapies involving spirituality or expressive arts, such as visual art, music or dance

  37. Mind/Body Practices • Visualization relaxation is a skill that can be learned; more practice leads to more effectively being able to relax • Massage: helpful in relieving pain, anxiety, fatigue and distress, as well as increasing relaxation

  38. Mind/Body Practices • A mindfulness-based practice such as meditation may help alleviate cancer related cognitive impairment by engaging the person in an attention based mental activity • In cancer patients, mind/body therapies can reduce anxiety, depression and mood disturbances and assist their coping skills

  39. Journaling • Very helpful for getting repetitive thoughts out of your head • No editing! • Gratitude Journal: three things you’re grateful for each day • Shown to decrease distress and improve coping and functioning

  40. Mindfulness Based Stress Reduction • Standardized form of meditation and yoga • Trains people to reduce their perceived level of stress by self-regulating arousal to stressful situations or symptoms • Has been shown to be effective in reducing anxiety, depression and stress in people with chronic pain

  41. Mindfulness Based Stress Reduction • Mindfulness: learning to be present in life as it is occurring, applying attitudes of kindness, patience, curiosity, acceptance, letting go and non-judging • Begin to realize the amount of emotional energy spent regretting the past or worrying about the future has resulted in missing the present moment

  42. Intervention • Six week modified program • Learned meditations, body scan, visualization • Learned understanding of their reaction to pleasant and unpleasant events • Had to practice daily

  43. MSBR Study • Significantly reduced symptoms of anxiety, depression, fear of recurrence • Improved indicators of physical and emotional quality of life • Energy, sleep, pain, social functioning • FOR remained prominent over time with 70% of women having fear after five years

  44. Effects of Stress • Stress related psychosocial factors are associated with: • A higher cancer incidence in initially healthy people • Poorer survival in people diagnosed with cancer • Higher cancer mortality

  45. The Best Study Ever • 39 hours of sessions with a psychologist over one year vs. regular care • Goals: reduce distress, improve QOL, improve health behaviors (diet, exercise, smoking cessation), facilitate cancer treatment compliance and facilitate medical follow up

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