环境奖励对癌症幸存者活动限制和抑郁情绪的中介作用:一项横断面研究

K. Hata, Emi Tajima, Shin-ichi Suzuki
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引用次数: 0

摘要

摘要背景:活动限制被认为是癌症幸存者抑郁情绪的预测因素。然而,关于这种情况究竟是如何发生的,却有不一致的证据。环境奖励是一个人因其活动而感觉到掌控或愉悦的状态,这可能是活动限制对抑郁情绪影响的中介。我们试图研究当癌症相关疲劳减轻时,环境奖励可能对活动限制和抑郁情绪之间的关系产生的中介作用。方法:通过日本癌症支持团体招募的癌症幸存者(n=94;平均年龄60.07岁)参与本研究。他们完成了一系列问卷调查,包括受访者的人口学和临床信息、癌症患者活动限制量表、环境奖励观察量表、癌症疲劳量表和医院焦虑和抑郁量表。结果:适度中介分析显示,高水平的活动限制预示着环境奖励的减少,而环境奖励的降低会加剧抑郁情绪。当癌症相关疲劳被平均分数的±1 SD调节时,观察到环境奖励的完全中介效应(当间接效应具有统计学意义,并且从先行因素到结果没有直接影响时)。这意味着,无论癌症幸存者经历的疲劳程度如何,预测抑郁情绪的并不是活动限制本身,而是由于活动限制导致抑郁情绪恶化而无法体验愉悦情绪。结论:从这些结果来看,环境奖励可能是活动限制对抑郁情绪的中介,与抑郁的行为模型一致。这些结果可以解释关于活动限制对抑郁情绪的直接影响的不一致的发现,并为癌症幸存者的心理治疗的有效性提供理论证据,这些治疗侧重于积极影响,如行为激活干预。
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The mediating effect of environmental reward on activity restriction and depressive mood in cancer survivors: a cross-sectional study
Abstract Background: Activity restriction is known as a predictor of depressive mood in cancer survivors. However, there is inconsistent evidence about precisely how this takes place. Environmental reward is a state where a person senses mastery or pleasure because of their activity, and this is known to be a possible mediator of the activity restriction effect on depressive mood. We sought to investigate that the mediating effect environmental reward could have on the relationship between activity restriction and depressive mood when moderated by cancer-related fatigue. Methods: Cancer survivors (n = 94; mean age, 60.07 years) recruited through cancer support groups in Japan participated in this study. They completed a battery of questionnaires, including demographic and clinical information about the respondents, the Activity Restriction Scale for Cancer Patients—Revised, the Environmental Reward Observation Scale, the Cancer Fatigue Scale, and the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale. Results: Moderated mediation analysis revealed that high levels of activity restriction predict a decrease in environmental reward, and a decrease in environmental reward exacerbates depressive mood. The full mediating effect (when the indirect effect is statistically significant and there is no direct effect from the antecedent to outcome) of environmental reward was observed when cancer-related fatigue was moderated by ±1 SD of the mean score. This implies that, regardless of the level of fatigue cancer survivors experience, it is not the activity restriction per se that predicts depressive mood but rather the inability to experience pleasurable emotions because of the activity restriction that leads to the exacerbation of depressive mood. Conclusion: From these results, environmental reward was found to be a possible mediator of activity restriction on depressive mood, consistent with behavioral models of depression. These results could explain the inconsistent findings about the direct effect of activity restriction on depressive mood and provide theoretical evidence for the effectiveness of psychological treatments for cancer survivors that focus on positive affect, such as behavioral activation interventions.
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