Facing off-time mortality: Leaving a legacy.

IF 4.3 3区 材料科学 Q1 ENGINEERING, ELECTRICAL & ELECTRONIC
Mary Kate Koch, Susan Bluck, Sophia Maggiore, Harvey Max Chochinov, Kiana Cogdill-Richardson, Carma Bylund
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Considering one's legacy is usual in later life but may be accentuated after receiving a serious and terminal cancer diagnosis. This may be particularly true when timing of the diagnosis is nonnormatively early, evoking the sense of losing future years of life. Acknowledging the severity of one's illness may also promote focus on legacy. We investigated the extent to which older individuals diagnosed with cancer narrated communion (i.e., loving, caring themes) when telling their legacy, including narration of aftermath concerns (i.e., concern for how others will fare after one's death). Communion was assessed in relation to individuals' potential years of life to lose and illness acknowledgment. Participants were a national sample of adults (N = 203; M = 65.80 years; 66% women; 77.94% White; 48.53% college-educated) with serious and terminal cancer receiving outpatient palliative care. They narrated legacies in semistructured interviews and completed measures of illness acknowledgment. We developed a novel construct, potential years of life to lose, calculated as the difference between chronological age and national life expectancy at birth. Coders, trained to high reliability, content-analyzed legacy narratives for communion with follow-up coding for aftermath concerns. Hierarchical regression indicated that for those with more potential years of life to lose, acknowledging the severity of their illness was critical to narrating communion-rich legacies. Similarly, aftermath concerns were common in those with the most years of life to lose who were able to acknowledge the severity of their illness. Findings affirm the psychological richness of individuals' legacies in the second half of life and highlight one way they adaptively respond to the nonnormative timing of serious and terminal cancer. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).
面对非正常死亡:留下遗产
在晚年生活中,考虑自己的遗产是很平常的事,但在被诊断出患有严重的晚期癌症后,考虑遗产的问题可能会更加突出。当确诊时间非正常提前时,这种情况可能尤为明显,让人感觉失去了未来的生命岁月。承认自己病情的严重性也会促进人们对遗产的关注。我们调查了被诊断出患有癌症的老年人在讲述自己的遗产时,包括讲述对后事的关注(即关注自己死后他人的生活状况)时,在多大程度上叙述了共融(即爱与关怀的主题)。对 "共融 "的评估与个人可能失去的生命年限和对疾病的认识有关。参与者是全国范围内接受门诊姑息治疗的重症晚期癌症成人样本(N = 203;M = 65.80 岁;66% 为女性;77.94% 为白人;48.53% 接受过大学教育)。他们在半结构化访谈中讲述了遗产,并完成了疾病认知测量。我们提出了一个新的概念,即 "可能失去的生命年数",计算方法是出生时的实际年龄与国家预期寿命之间的差值。经过高可靠性培训的编码员对遗产叙述的内容进行了分析,以便与后续的后遗症问题编码保持一致。层次回归结果表明,对于那些可能失去更多寿命的人来说,承认自己疾病的严重性对于叙述富有共融性的遗产至关重要。同样,对于那些能够承认自己疾病严重性的人来说,在他们失去生命的年限最多的时候,对后事的关注也很普遍。研究结果肯定了个人在后半生留下的丰富心理遗产,并强调了他们对重症和晚期癌症的非正常时间做出适应性反应的一种方式。(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA,保留所有权利)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.20
自引率
4.30%
发文量
567
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