Clinical Health Psychology for Cancer Experience: Current Challenges among Prevention, Treatment and Chronicity
A special issue of International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health (ISSN 1660-4601). This special issue belongs to the section "Mental Health".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (31 March 2023) | Viewed by 29231
Special Issue Editors
Interests: cancer; traumatic experience; meaning-making; narrative; adaptation and integration; clinical health psychology; psychological intervention
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
To date, current advances in science, medicine, and technology make it possible to screen and treat illnesses previously considered incurable and life-threatening. These advances transformed most acute illnesses into chronic one, such as cancer conditions, favoring early diagnosis and long-lasting survival. The increase of cancer survival rates generates a rise in people living in a chronic condition. The patient is involved in adaptation and engagement processes that open to complex psychological needs, such as: changes in daily routine, drug intake, side effects, fear of recurrence, and follow-up checks. These conditions impose the psychic challenge of constructing a new continuity/balance of life narrative by integrating the recovery of personal health within a condition of chronicity. The increase of the average of life expectancy, therefore, opens two scenarios in which clinical health psychology is called to think new epistemological frameworks and models of psychological-clinical intervention. On the one hand, connected to the adaptation and integration processes in chronic oncological conditions; on the other hand, related to preventive processes aimed at reducing the risks associated with the development of chronic condition, ensuring an early diagnosis of the cancer. Cancer should be gradually thought at the center of a continuum between prevention and chronicity. Within the One Health framework it is relevant to define the main trajectories by which clinical health psychology can be inscribed in social contexts and practices involved in cancer prevention, treatment and chronicity. In this Special Issue, we invite authors to enrich the actual national and international debate with contributions that deepen one or more of the three aforementioned domains: prevention, treatment, and chronicity. Research papers, longitudinal studies, reviews, case reports, brief reports, conducted through qualitative, quantitative, or mixed methods within different types of cancer and/or illness experiences-are welcome.
Dr. Maria Luisa Martino
Dr. Daniela Lemmo
Guest Editors
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Keywords
- cancer
- oncological prevention
- health behaviors
- chronicity
- critical-traumatic experience
- mental health
- adaptation process
- meaning and sense making
- qualitative and quantitative method
- clinical health psychology
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