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Showing 1 to 15 of 61 results Save | Export
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Park, Min Sook; Park, Hyejin – Information Research: An International Electronic Journal, 2016
Introduction: Health information-seeking and sharing online has become immensely intertwined with day-to-day information-seeking of US immigrants with health concerns. Despite the consistent recognition of unique health needs among different US immigrant communities, little is known about the distinctive patterns and extent of health information…
Descriptors: Korean Americans, Cancer, Help Seeking, Computer Mediated Communication
Clark, W. Crawford; Ferrer-Brechner, Theresa – 1985
Multidimensional scaling (MDS) offers a rigorous approach to many problems in perception, emotion, personality, and cognition, where the stimuli are too complex to be quantified by other means. In these procedures similarity ratings of the stimulus objects are modeled as points in multidimensional space, such that perceived similarity is…
Descriptors: Affective Measures, Cancer, Multidimensional Scaling, Sensory Experience
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Chemical and Engineering News, 1984
A study of white women members (N=347) of the American Chemical Society who died between 1925 and 1979 finds five times the expected rate of suicide, a higher risk for some forms of cancer, and a lower rate of heart disease. These and other findings are discussed. (JN)
Descriptors: Cancer, Chemistry, Diseases, Females
Linsky, Arnold S.; And Others – 1986
This study investigated the relationship between the stressfulness of each state's social environment, smoking, and mortality rates for respiratory cancer. It was based on a health behavior model which assumed that under conditions of high stress some people fail to exercise normal prudence in either protecting their health or engage in practices…
Descriptors: Cancer, Death, Smoking, Social Environment
Zarin, H. K. – 1998
The development of depression in ill and healthy adolescents is explored and the question of whether hospitalization is accompanied by improvement in depression among cancer and non-cancer patients is addressed. Two studies, one between and one within subjects, longitudinal design with repeated measurement over 4 months, were carried out. MANOVA…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Cancer, Chronic Illness, Depression (Psychology)
Manuel, Gerdenio M.; And Others – 1987
Since the incidence of cancer in this country is high and the cancer survival rates are increasing, it is important to study coping strategies in cancer patients. As survival time lengthens, coping strategies that might affect the quality of a patient's life become increasingly important. A study was conducted to examine coping strategies in newly…
Descriptors: Adults, Cancer, Cognitive Style, Coping
Tharp, Paulette – 1978
The paper discusses the rehabilitation of pediatric cancer patients undertaken by a multidisciplinary team with the arm of returning the children to the classroom. Details including transportation, tutoring, and preparation of classmates are considered. (CL)
Descriptors: Cancer, Diseases, Interdisciplinary Approach, Program Descriptions
Dickel, C. Timothy – 1990
People in the counseling profession make some profound assumptions about the freedom that all people have (or seem to have). From the moment that each counselor began counselor training, the notion that people are able to generally choose and make decisions for themselves has been associated with the dominant process models of the profession. As a…
Descriptors: Aging (Individuals), Cancer, Life Satisfaction, Nursing Homes
Rounds, James B., Jr.; Zevon, Michael A. – 1986
High levels of stress experienced by primary care oncology nursing staff, and the competency impairment which results from such stress, has become a matter of much concern in health care settings. This study was conducted to identify the coping strategies employed by oncology nurses, and to relate these strategies to differential indices of stress…
Descriptors: Burnout, Cancer, Coping, Nurses
Pfaff, Valerie Kalsbeck – 1986
Music therapy, the systematic application of music and musical activities to elicit specific changes in emotional, physical, or social behavior, can help pediatric cancer patients to decrease their anxiety and cope with hospitalization. Because music is a nonverbal means of expression, it is an especially effective medium for young children who…
Descriptors: Anxiety, Cancer, Children, Coping
Zevon, Michael A.; And Others – 1986
This study was conducted to examine the influence of medical, psychological, and familial factors on the coping of pediatric cancer patients. Participants were 36 pediatric cancer patients and their families under active treatment at Roswell Park Memorial Institute, a comprehensive cancer research and treatment center in Buffalo, New York. The…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Cancer, Children, Coping
Baum, L. S.; And Others – 1988
The relationship between lifestyle behaviors and the onset of neoplasm development has been researched extensively. This study took a multivariate approach in attempting to identify lifestyle variables which could predict group membership among subjects diagnosed as having cancer and those subjects who have not been diagnosed as having cancer.…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Adults, Behavior Patterns, Cancer
Revenson, Tracey A.; Felton, Barbara J. – 1985
Most studies of stress and coping processes among patients with serious illnesses have focused on acute illness states. Far less research has involved systematic examination of the types and frequency of illness-related stresses experienced by individuals living with chronic illness. To compare the nature and degree of illness-related stress posed…
Descriptors: Cancer, Coping, Diabetes, Diseases
Tharp, Paulette – 1978
The paper discusses the role of the Child Life Worker as a member of a multidisciplinary team in the rehabilitation of cancer patients and their families when children are involved. It is noted that the concepts can be applied to any chronic pediatric illness or handicapping condition. (Author/SBH)
Descriptors: Cancer, Counselor Role, Family Counseling, Interdisciplinary Approach
Meyerowitz, Beth E.; And Others – 1984
Previous research suggests that belief in the uncontrollability of a situation results in maladaptive attempts to control outcomes; perceptions of cancer's uncontrollability may result in negative attitudes toward the disease and toward patients. To test this theory 160 college students read and responded to a paragraph describing a disease…
Descriptors: Cancer, College Students, Higher Education, Locus of Control
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