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Background:
A cancer diagnosis is a threat to life and bodily integrity. This can cause people with cancer to experience traumatic stress. Researchers want to better understand the types of stress and emotional reactions people with cancer experience. They also want to know if the stress people with cancer have had during their life affects their stress related to cancer.
Objective:
To see if lifetime traumas, along with psychosocial distress, can predict traumatic stress symptoms in people with cancer.
Eligibility:
People ages 18 and older who have had or are currently getting care from the NIH Clinical Center for one of these cancers:
Leukemia
Lymphoma
Mesothelioma
Prostate cancer
Design:
Participants will be screened with name, date of birth, and diagnosis.
Participants will allow access to their medical records.
Participants will complete, online or in person, a demographic sheet and 3 questionnaires:
The PTSD Checklist for DSM-5: This assesses traumatic stress symptoms and takes 5 10
minutes to complete.
The Life Events Checklist for DSM-5: This assesses potentially traumatic life events and
takes about 5 minutes to complete.
The Brief Symptoms Inventory 18: This assesses psychosocial distress and takes about 4
minutes to complete....
Full description
Background:
Objectives:
Eligibility:
Design:
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
This study is open to all people with or who have been treated for cancer at the NIH CC in Bethesda, Maryland and meet the following criteria. This is done to provide the richest cross-section possible in this availability sample of patients undergoing or post treatment. Eligibility criteria include participants who are:
EXCLUSION CRITERIA:
55 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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