PAIN
Volume 137, Issue 2 , Pages 306-315, 15 July 2008

Self-efficacy for managing pain, symptoms, and function in patients with lung cancer and their informal caregivers: Associations with symptoms and distress

  • Laura S. Porter

      Affiliations

    • Duke University Medical Center, 2200 West Main Street, Suite 340, Durham, NC 27705, USA
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Tel.: +1 919 416 3436; fax: +1 919 416 3458.
  • ,
  • Francis J. Keefe

      Affiliations

    • Duke University Medical Center, 2200 West Main Street, Suite 340, Durham, NC 27705, USA
  • ,
  • Jennifer Garst

      Affiliations

    • Duke University Medical Center, 2200 West Main Street, Suite 340, Durham, NC 27705, USA
  • ,
  • Colleen M. McBride

      Affiliations

    • National Institutes of Health, USA
  • ,
  • Donald Baucom

      Affiliations

    • University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, USA

Received 3 November 2006; received in revised form 11 September 2007; accepted 11 September 2007. published online 17 October 2007.

Abstract 

This study examined self-efficacy for managing pain, symptoms, and function in patients with lung cancer and their caregivers, and associations between self-efficacy and patient and caregiver adjustment. One hundred and fifty-two patients with early stage lung cancer completed measures of self-efficacy, pain, fatigue, quality of life, depression, and anxiety. Their caregivers completed a measure assessing their self-efficacy for helping the patient manage symptoms and measures of psychological distress and caregiver strain. Analyses indicated that, overall, patients and caregivers were relatively low in self-efficacy for managing pain, symptoms, and function, and that there were significant associations between self-efficacy and adjustment. Patients low in self-efficacy reported significantly higher levels of pain, fatigue, lung cancer symptoms, depression, and anxiety, and significantly worse physical and functional well being, as did patients whose caregivers were low in self-efficacy. When patients and caregivers both had low self-efficacy, patients reported higher levels of anxiety and poorer quality of life than when both were high in self-efficacy. There were also significant associations between patient and caregiver self-efficacy and caregiver adjustment, with lower levels of self-efficacy associated with higher levels of caregiver strain and psychological distress. These preliminary findings raise the possibility that patient and caregiver self-efficacy for managing pain, symptoms, and function may be important factors affecting adjustment, and that interventions targeted at increasing self-efficacy may be useful in this population.

Keywords: Seff-efficacy, Symptom management, Lung cancer, Caregivers

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PII: S0304-3959(07)00518-0

doi:10.1016/j.pain.2007.09.010

PAIN
Volume 137, Issue 2 , Pages 306-315, 15 July 2008