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Illness Beliefs

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When faced with a health threat, individuals form beliefs about their illness in order to make sense of their illness experience and develop strategies to manage the illness (Leventhal et al., 2003). Illness beliefs have well-documented associations with adherence to treatment (e.g., Llewellyn, Minders, Lee, Harrington, & Weinman, 2003) and general coping behaviors (e.g., Rozema, Vollink, & Lechner, 2009). When patients’ symptoms align with their beliefs about their illness, they are more likely to seek treatment and adhere to treatment recommendations; however, when patients’ illness beliefs do not reflect an accurate view of the illness, they are more likely to delay seeking treatment and display poorer adherence to medical recommendations …show more content…

For some individuals, cancer can be perceived as highly intrusive, especially in the context of HNC if patients feel that they cannot engage in normal daily activities, such as eating meals or taking part in social conversations. The impact of cancer on their self-image depends on how healthy and balanced their self-image was prior to their cancer diagnosis, particularly how much of their sense of self was based on their appearance, physical functioning, and food related behaviors. Unfortunately, survivors of HNC often report that they are unprepared for the degree of intrusiveness that they experience following cancer treatment (Henry et al., 2014; Ganzer, Touger-Decker, Byham-Gray, Murphy, & Epstein, …show more content…

Benefit finding refers to an individual’s belief that positive changes have occurred as a result of challenging life events, such as a major illness (Taylor, 1983). Benefit finding has been associated with better psychosocial well-being and lower distress in numerous chronic illness populations (Algoe & Stanton, 2009). Some people are able to take a difficult experience and identify what they have learned about themselves or their relationships as a result of that experience. Others identify specific benefits, such as meeting a nice nurse or SLP, being able to step back from a stressful career, or taking the opportunity to go on vacations or have other experiences that they would not have had the motivation to pursue were it not for the cancer. Benefit finding also plays a role in patients’ reactions to negative side effects, for example, do they view facial disfigurement or dysphagia as a necessary trade-off for survival. Although benefit finding is usually correlated with positive well-being, this often occurs after a long process of grappling with the illness experience and experiencing illness-related distress rather than being an instantaneous

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