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Depressive symptoms among cancer patients: Variation by gender, cancer type, and social engagement

Authors
Park, Gum-RyeongKim, Jinho
Issue Date
10월-2021
Publisher
WILEY
Keywords
cancer; depressive symptoms; fixed effects; gender; social engagement
Citation
RESEARCH IN NURSING & HEALTH, v.44, no.5, pp.811 - 821
Indexed
SCIE
SSCI
SCOPUS
Journal Title
RESEARCH IN NURSING & HEALTH
Volume
44
Number
5
Start Page
811
End Page
821
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/128601
DOI
10.1002/nur.22168
ISSN
0160-6891
Abstract
Prior literature has documented an association between cancer and depressive symptoms. There has been a limited understanding about whether the association between cancer and depressive symptoms varies by gender and whether social engagement moderates this association. Using seven waves of the Korean Longitudinal Study of Ageing (N = 10,055), we examine the association between cancer and depressive symptoms among middle- and older-aged adults in Korea. We conduct fixed-effects regression models to account for unobserved characteristics of individuals that may confound this association. We first investigate whether the association between cancer and depressive symptom differs by gender. We distinguish among cancer types to assess potentially distinctive mental health consequences of different types of cancer. Then, we explore whether social engagement moderates the cancer-depressive symptoms association. Naive OLS models yielded significant associations between cancer and depressive symptoms for both men and women. However, our preferred fixed effects estimates revealed that the association was statistically significant only for men, and not for women. This association was especially pronounced for lung cancer. We also found that one's level of social engagement including informal connections and formal social activities moderates the link between cancer and depressive symptoms. Cancer is not only a leading cause of death, but also a serious threat to one's mental health. This study sheds light on gender differences in psychological reactions to cancer among Korean adults. Findings of this study hold important implications for programs aiming to improve the mental health and quality of life of cancer patients.
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