2Department of Mental Health and Diseases, Hacettepe University, Ankara-Turkey DOI : 10.5505/tjo.2021.2642
Summary
OBJECTIVEBreast cancer patients usually have psychological symptoms related with their perceptions of cancer. In our study, we aimed to investigate perception of illness, coping styles, and magical ideation of breast cancer patients, to compare their coping styles and magical ideation with healthy controls, and to investigate the relationships between these parameters.
METHODS
The study included 51 breast cancer patients and 79 people as control group. The Revised Illness Perception
Questionnaire (IPQ-R) was given cancer patients and Coping Orientation to Problems Experienced
Inventory and The Magical Ideation Scale (MIS) were given both patients and healthy controls.
RESULTS
IPQ-R personal control perception and treatment control mean scores were higher than the other subdimension
scores. Personal attributions and luck have been reported as the primarily cause of illness
by patients. MIS scores were higher in the control group than patients. Emotion-focused coping scores
were significantly lower in the cancer group than control group. A significant positive correlation has
been found between the emotion-focused coping and cognitive representations and causal attributions.
CONCLUSION
Understanding how patients perceive the disease, their causal attributions and coping styles provides
useful information to psychiatrists in planning psychosocial interventions.
Introduction
Breast cancer is the most common type of cancer in women and may to significant changes in the body that may cause death.[1] In cancer patients, psychological symptoms are often accompanied by physical symptoms. The perceptions of patients with cancer toward their illness are significant determinants of these psychological symptoms they often encounter[2,3] and the perceptions can be affected by several variables, such as age, life experiences, personality, beliefs, socioeconomic status, marital status, family history, the severity of illness, level of education, and clinical features of the illness.[4-12] Perception of illness is indicative of an individual's judgments and beliefs about an illness.[13] The term is based on Leventhal's self-regulation theory and illness representation model.[14,15] According to self-regulation theory, when a person is undergo a health threat, internal stimuli (symptoms of illness), and external stimuli (being sick) produce cognitive and emotional reactions.[15]Interventions based on the perception of illness in patients with chronic illnesses can reduce emotional distress.[6] Cultural background may also affect the beliefs and behaviors of patients regarding health and how they cope with illness.[16] Whatever illness is causing stress, the coping style adapted can promote effective management of the illness, and coping ability can improve with time.[17]
Immediately following the diagnosis of cancer, patients will ask themselves such questions as why me? what should I do? and why do I have cancer? and will struggle to make sense of the situation.[18,19] A cancer diagnosis can result in significant life changes, including the experience of stress, anxiety, and fear. Such emotions indicate that a patient needs to develop a coping strategy.[17] Just as a patient is unable to find an appropriate explanation for their cancer diagnosis, they will activate their own belief system.[20] When considering the causes of their illness, which is among the dimensions of the perception of illness, some cancer patients attribute their illness to such factors as chance.[21]
Thinking that an event is linked to another event by culturally unaccepted causes is known as magical ideation.[22] Although magical ideation is a significant feature in schizophrenia, schizotypy, delusional disorder, and obsessive-compulsive disorder[23] and has been investigated in somatoform disorder,[24] it has not been studied sufficiently in patients with medical illnesses, including cancer. It has been shown in various patient groups that understanding magical ideation may be beneficial in terms of increasing the diversity of therapeutic interventions, especially by identifying subgroups in which the use of imaginative techniques is effective.[24,25]
The present study aims to investigate the perception of illness, coping style and magical ideation in patients undergoing treatment for breast cancer, and compare coping style and magical ideation in patients with breast cancer and healthy controls. It was hypothesized that cancer patients who perceive their illness more positively are expected to use more functional coping mechanisms and cancer patients with a tendency for magical ideation will attribute the cause of their illness to chance, which will be associated with a decrease in the sense of control over their illness.
Methods
ParticipantsThe present study included two groups. The breast cancer group consisted of patients with breast cancer that were presented to Diskapi Yildirim Beyazit Training and Research Hospital, Psychiatry Outpatient Clinic, Ankara, Turkey, between March 1, 2019, and September 1, 2019. The criteria for inclusion of patients were a diagnosis of breast cancer, female gender, age 18-65 years, and literacy. The criteria for the control group, which included healthy volunteers, were female gender, no chronic illnesses, age 18-65 years, literacy, and no active mental illness or admission. Individuals with a physical illness or limitation preventing being interviewed, a psychiatric or neurological disorder that may affect cognitive functions, and an active alcohol/substance use disorder were excluded from this study. This study included 130 participants. The study protocol was approved by the Ankara Diskapi Yildirim Beyazit Training and Research Hospital Ethics Committee (decision no. 65/15). All the participants provided written informed consent.
Scales
Questionnaire for socio-demographic data
This form was used to collect socio-demographic data, including
age, gender, marital status, and level of education.
The revised illness perception questionnaire (IPQ-R)
This scale was developed by Weinman et al.[26] Armay
et al.[27] reported that the Turkish version was valid
and reliable for use in cancer patients in Turkey. The
scale consists of three subscales:
Illness identity
This subscale includes questions about 14 common
symptoms experienced since the beginning of the illness
and whether the respondent has found any connection
to the illness.
Cognitive representations about illness
This subscale includes 38 items regarding opinions
about illness. Items are answered using a 5-point Likert-
type scale. This subscale includes seven sub-dimensions:
Personal controllability, treatment controllability,
acute/chronic timeline, cyclical timeline, coherence,
consequences, and emotional representations.
Causal attributions
This subscale includes 18 items concerning a person's
thoughts about the possible causes of an illness. Items are answered using a 5-point Likert-type scale. The
subscale consists of four sub-dimensions: Psychological
attributions, risk factor attributions, immune attributions,
and chance attributions. At the end of the
scale, respondents are requested to write down three
factors that they regard as the most important cause
of their illness. The validity and reliability study of the
Turkish version performed by Armay et al.[27] identified
five sub-dimensions, not four as in the original.
Coping Orientation to Problems Experienced Inventory
(COPE) inventory
The scale was developed by Carver et al.[28] The Turkish
version was reported to be valid and reliable by Ağargün
et al.[29] This self-report scale includes 60 items that are
answered, as follows: 1. I would never do such a thing;
2. I rarely do such a thing; 3. I do this moderately; and
4. I mostly do this. The scale has 15 subscales that are
grouped and provide scores for problem-focused, emotion-
focused, and non-functional coping styles.
The Magical Ideation Scale (MIS)
This 30-item scale was designed to evaluate magical
ideation. The items are answered as true or false. Eckblad
and Chapman[22] developed the scale to predict
future psychotic symptoms in young adults. Most of
the scale's items include terminology based on modifications
of Schneider's first-order symptoms that can
indicate susceptibility to psychosis. The Turkish version
was reported to be valid and reliable by Atbaşoğlu et
al.,[30] with cutoff scores of 21 for males and 23 for females.
Higher total scores indicate a greater tendency
for magical ideation.
Statistical Analysis
Statistical analysis was performed using IBM SPSS
Statistics for Windowsv.21.0 (IBM Corp., Armonk,
NY). As the assumption of normality was fulfilled,
parametric tests were used for all analyses. Socio-demographic
data were evaluated using descriptive analysis
methods. For between-group comparisons, the
t-test was used and to control for the effect of independent
variables on dependent variables, the ANCOVA
method was used. Pearson's correlation analysis was
used to investigate the relationships between dependent
variables.
Results
This study included 130 participants: 51 participants in the breast cancer group and 79 participants in the control group. Participant socio-demographic data are shown in Table 1. There was a significant difference between the two groups in age (t=11.297, p<0.001) and years of education (t=-5.621, p<0.001). Mean age in the breast cancer group (54.06±9.97 years) was significantly higher than in the control group (33.85±9.45 years). Mean years of education in the control group (10.71±3.78 years) were significantly higher than in the breast cancer group (7.08±3.47 years).Table 1: Socio-demographic characteristics of the participants
In all, 92% of patients with breast cancer reported that they were informed about their illness. According to IPQ-R scores in the breast cancer group, from the onset of the illness the most common symptoms were fatigue (33.8%), loss of strength (26.9%), and sleep disturbance (23.1%), of which fatigue and loss problemof strength were most commonly associated with cancer. In the breast cancer group, mean IPQ-R perception of personal control and treatment control sub-dimension scores were higher than for the scale's other sub-dimensions (Table 2). In the breast cancer group, IPQ-R causal attributions subscale personal attributes (stress or anxiety, my attitude, personality, and emotional state) and luck sub-dimension scores were higher than other causal attribution sub-dimension scores.
Table 2: IPQ-R cognitive representations about illness and causal attributions subscale scores
MIS total scores were below the cutoff in both the breast cancer and control groups, although the scores were significantly lower in the breast cancer group (p=0.020) (Table 3). COPE Inventory emotion-focused coping scores were significantly lower in the breast cancer group than in the control group (p=0.016), but there was not a significant difference between the groups concerning problem-focused coping and nonfunctional coping (Table 3).
As the two groups differed concerning education and age, ANCOVA analysis was performed to compare the groups after removing the effects of these parameters on the study scales" scores. ANCOVA showed that the group-education level common effect was not significant on the MIS score (F(1-126)=0.034, p=0.853), COPE Inventory problem-focused coping score (F(1-125)=3.157, p=0.078), COPE Inventory emotion-focused coping score (F(1-125)=3.603, p=0.060), or COPE Inventory non-functional coping score (F(1-126)=0.556, p=0.457). According to the level of education in the two groups (F(1-127)=6.190, p<0.05), there was a significant difference only concerning the corrected MIS score. According to the results of the Bonferroni test, MIS scores were significantly lower in the breast cancer group (mean=6.33) than in the control group (mean=8.23).
According to ANCOVA analysis of age, the groupage joint effect was not significant for the MIS score (F(1-123)=1.147, p=0.286), or the COPE Inventory problem- focused coping score (F(1-122)=0.361, p=0.549), COPE Inventory emotion-focused coping score (F(1- 122)=1.031, p=0.312), and COPE Inventory non-functional coping score (F(1-123)=0.003, p=0.956). In addition, there was not a significant difference in MIS total scores (F(1-124)=2.565, p=0.112), COPE Inventory problem- focused coping scores (F(1-123)=0.138, p=0.711), COPE Inventory emotion-focused coping scores (F(1- 123)=0.910, p=0.342), or COPE Inventory non-functional coping scores (F(1-124)=3.609, p=0.060) between the two groups after adjusting for age.
Finally, the relationships between COPE Inventory sub-dimension scores, IPQ-R subscale scores, and MIS scores are shown in Table 4. There was a significant negative correlation between the COPE Inventory problem-focused coping score and the IPQ-R cognitive representations about illness subscale and its acute/chronic timeline sub-dimension scores (r=-0.356, p<0.05). There was a significant positive correlation between the COPE Inventory emotion-focused coping score and the IPQ-R cognitive representations about illness subscale score (r=0.351, p<0.05) and IPQ-R causal attributions luck sub-dimension score (r=0.287, p<0.05). There was a significant negative correlation between the COPE Inventory non-functional coping score and the IPQ-R coherence subscale score (r=-0.302, p<0.05). There were not any significant relationships between the three study scales" other subscale scores.
Discussion
The present study aims to analyze illness perception, coping style, and magical ideation in patients with breast cancer and determine if there is a relationship between magical ideation, and coping style and illness perception. An additional aim is to compare the coping style and magical ideation in patients with breast cancer and healthy controls.Fatigue is the most common symptom in cancer patients, affecting 48-64% of patients, negatively affecting functionality, and quality of life.[31-33] In the present study, 33.8% of the patients experienced fatigue, which was commonly associated with cancer, according to the IPQ-R symptoms of illness subscale. In all, 28.5% of the patients attributed their fatigue to breast cancer.
IPQ-R personal control perception and treatment control mean scores were higher than the other sub-dimension scores in the breast cancer group. The personal control perception sub-dimension score is indicative of an individual's perception of control over the duration, course, and treatment of an illness and evaluates beliefs about an individual's power to influence the course of illness. The treatment control sub-dimension of IPQ-R evaluates an individual's beliefs about the treatment of illness and higher scores indicate a greater belief that illness can be controlled with treatment.[2] Many studies reported that an individual believing they have personal and treatment control over an illness is associated with adaptive coping styles.[34] Illness perception differs according to culture, and there is a relationship between the perception of control and the level of anxiety.
The diagnosis of cancer results in significant life changes, and patients begin to have existential questions and attempt to regain control of their lives.[35] The high perception of personal control and treatment control scores in the present study's breast cancer group can be considered in this context. In the present study, the patients" IPQ-R understanding of the illness scores was lower than the other IPQ-R sub-dimension scores. According to the literature, cancer patients are not sufficiently informed about their illness.[36] In the present study, 92% of the patients reported that they were informed about their illness, but not adequately.
In the present study, the patients with breast cancer primarily reported personal attributions and luck as the cause of their illness. In addition to individual and environmental attributes, cultural attributes also play a crucial role in the perception of illness. [37,38] In agreement with the present findings, it was reported earlier that in Turkish society that illness was commonly attributed to stress.[37] Based on the literature, illness is often attributed to psychological causes, such as stress, which is an important focus of research because identifying causes of diseases that are modifiable can affect an individual's attitude after diagnosis.[39] On the other hand, attributing illness to luck may lead to negative perceptions and attitudes towards illness.[24,39]
Coping styles can be categorized as problem-focused and emotion-focused.[40] Individuals with a problem-focused coping style focus directly on problems related to an illness, using strategies aimed at themselves and the environment. Emotion-focused coping is characterized by dealing with the emotional consequences of illness and emerges when an individual determines that there is nothing to do in the face of a life-threatening illness.[41] This type of coping style primarily targets reducing the tension created by the illness process.[42] In the present study, patients with breast cancer used emotion-focused coping less frequently than the controls, but the two groups did not differ concerning other coping styles. It was reported that there was a relationship between coping style and level of education in cancer patients,[43] and as the present study observed a difference in the level of education between the breast cancer and controls groups, it was thought that it might affect the other findings; however, such an effect was not noted.
Magical ideation can be encountered in schizophrenia, schizotypy, delusional disorder, and obsessivecompulsive disorder, and some studies reported that magical ideation could manifest as paranormal beliefs in those with stress- and trauma-related disorders. [44,45] In recent years, magical ideation has also been studied in somatoform disorders.[24] Magical ideation and paranormal beliefs may cause patients to misunderstand the cause of the disease.[22] In the present study, it was expected that due to illness-related stress, magical ideation would be more common in the breast cancer group than in the control group; however, in contrast to this assumption, magical ideation scores were below the cutoff in both groups, although the scores were higher in the control group. As the MIS used in the present study was developed to predict future psychotic episodes, especially in young adults,[30] it might be that the lower mean age in the control group accounted for this difference. However, further analysis showed that age did not affect. In the present study, none of the participants had a score above the MIS cutoff. Further research is needed to more clearly discern if there are any differences in magical ideation between patients with breast cancer and healthy controls.
The present study also investigated the relationship between magical ideation, coping style and perception of the illness in patients with breast cancer. An individual's perception of illness strongly affects their coping style.[46] In the present study, patients that perceived their illness to be chronic were less likely to employ a problem-focused coping style. The literature emphasizes that the perception of the timeline of illness (cyclical or acute/chronic), which is measured by the IPQ-R cognitive representations about illness subscale, causes negative perceptions that induce patients to develop an emotion-focused coping style, can predict post-treatment depression, has a significant effect on adverse psychological consequences of an illness, and can change over time.[34] In the present study, patients were more likely to adopt an emotion-focused coping style if they perceived the outcome of their illness more negatively and considered that luck was a causative factor. This finding is consistent with the results of earlier studies that reported a connection between negative perception of the outcome of an illness and a passive and non-functional coping style.[5,47] Patients with breast cancer that attribute their illness to luck are more likely to use a non-adaptive coping style than patients that attribute their illness to modifiable factors.[39]
The relationship between magical ideation and illness perception was also investigated in the present study. It was reported that those with a high degree of magical ideation were highly likely to attribute the cause of an illness to luck;[24] however, in the present study there was not a relationship between the perception that luck was the cause of breast cancer and magical ideation. As the precise role of magical ideation in the perception of illness among those with serious illnesses, such as chronic illnesses and cancer, is as yet unknown and has not been sufficiently studied, additional larger-scale research is warranted.
Limitations
The present study has a few limitations. The cross-sectional
nature of the present study makes it difficult to
show causality. Differences in disease stage and treatment
between the patients might have affected the
patients" perceptions of the disease differently. In addition, the patients with breast cancer were not evaluated
for psychopathology, which may affect patients"
perception of illness.
Conclusion
Understanding how cancer patients perceive the illness process, what they attribute their illness to, and what coping style they use can aid clinicians in helping them acquire a positive mindset concerning the control and treatment of the disease, to make sense of the illness process with a healthy perspective, and to cope appropriately and adequately. Additional relevant research is needed for the development of effective psychological interventions for use by consulting psychiatrists treating patients with breast cancer.Peer-review: Externally peer-reviewed.
Conflict of Interest: All authors declared no conflict of interest.
Ethics Committee Approval: The study was approved by the University of Health Sciences, Ankara Diskapi Yildirim Beyazit Training and Research Hospital Clinical Research Ethics Committee (No: 65/15, Date: 18/06/2019).
Financial Support: None declared.
Authorship contributions: Concept - Y.K., B.D., A.G.G.; Design - Y.K., B.D., A.G.G.; Supervision - Y.K., B.D., A.G.G.; Funding - Y.K., A.G.G.; Materials - Y.K., A.G.G.; Data collection and/or processing - Y.K., A.G.G.; Data analysis and/ or interpretation - Y.K., B.D., A.G.G.; Literature search - Y.K., B.D., A.G.G.; Writing - Y.K., B.D., A.G.G.; Critical review - Y.K., B.D., A.G.G.
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