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Journal article

Cancer Problems in Living and Quality of Life After Bone Marrow Transplantation

Abstract

This study was conducted to develop an objective problems-in-living scale to identify the needs of cancer survivors after a demanding treatment such as bone marrow transplantation (BMT). A total of 99 adult BMT survivors completed questionnaires containing the 29 items included in the Cancer Problems-In-Living Scale (CPILS). These BMT survivors were most concerned about return of their illness or relapsing, the future, fatigue, not physically being able to have sexual intercourse, changes in their physical appearance, being concerned about infection and crowds, difficulty in obtaining adequate insurance, losing health insurance by changing jobs, and difficulty in meeting medical expenses. The CPILS showed a good level of internal consistency (α = .91). The hypothesis that BMT survivors who had lower levels of physical functioning would experience more problems with living was supported by correlation (.48, p < .001) of the CPILS with the Self-Rated Karnofsky Performance Scale. The construct validity of the CPILS was further supported by a significant negative correlation (−.66, p < .002) with the scores of BMT survivors on a quality-of-life measure, the Satisfaction with Life Domains Scale for BMT.

Authors

Baker F; Denniston M; Zabora JR; Marcellus D

Journal

Journal of Clinical Psychology in Medical Settings, Vol. 10, No. 1, pp. 27–34

Publisher

Springer Nature

Publication Date

March 1, 2003

DOI

10.1023/a:1022801713046

ISSN

1068-9583

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