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(English)Manuscript (preprint) (Other academic)
Abstract [en]
Background: Mothers diagnosed with cancer experience significant psychological distress, affecting both their own and their families’ well-being. Despite high support needs, easily accessed psychological support remains limited. Affect-focused psychodynamic psychotherapy (AFT) has been shown effective in improving psychological well-being but has not been studied in this population.
Purpose: To test the feasibility, acceptability, safety and preliminary effects of online delivered AFT among parents with cancer.
Methods: This feasibility study included qualitative interviews analysed with inductive content analysis to assess feasibility, acceptability and safety, and quantitative pre- and post-intervention assessments of changes in mental health outcomes using questionnaires. Primary outcomes were symptoms of depression and anxiety. Secondary outcomes were parenting concerns, emotion regulation, affect-phobia, self-efficacy, closeness in the family, and self-rated health.
Results: The qualitative findings highlighted key factors concerning the conditions of participation, the content of the intervention and the perceived effects. The quantitative results indicated improvements in depression, anxiety, as well as in all secondary outcomes but one subscale of emotion regulation.
Conclusions: Findings suggest that online delivered AFT is feasible, acceptable, and safe for mothers diagnosed with cancer, and promising in terms of improvement in several aspects of psychological function.
Implications: Online delivered AFT may provide accessible and effective psychological support for mothers diagnosed with cancer, addressing an important gap in routine cancer care. To confirm efficacy and explore the long-term effects, randomised controlled trials with larger and more heterogeneous samples should be conducted. Further studies also need to explore factors related to optimising implementation in clinical settings.
Keywords
Neoplasms, parenting, psychological interventions, psychodynamic therapy, affect-focused psychotherapy
National Category
Cancer and Oncology Applied Psychology
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-554972 (URN)
2025-04-202025-04-202025-04-20