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Article

RESILIENCE ACROSS THE TRANSITION TO CANCER SURVIVORSHIP

 

Abstract

Resilience is highly relevant in the context of cancer, and understanding how survivors adapt and potentially thrive following their diagnosis and treatment may provide insights into better supports and interventions to promote healthier survivorship. In this paper, we characterize two different ways to conceptualize and study resilience in cancer survivorship, as a trait and as a process. We focus specifically on the transition from active treatment to post-treatment survivorship. We present data from 225 cancer patients transitioning from active treatment (baseline assessment) to early survivorship (6-month follow-up). Results demonstrate that resilience assessed as a trait at baseline was unrelated to changes in survivors’ mental or physical wellbeing at follow-up, but did predict a decline in social satisfaction and spiritual wellbeing over time. However, when resilience is conceptualized as a dynamic process, the sample showed substantial resilience on multiple aspects of wellbeing. We suggest that different ways of conceptualizing resilience–as a trait versus as a dynamic process–may lead to very different conclusions and discuss future research directions for cancer survivors and for science of resilience.

Disclosure Statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Additional information

Funding

The work was supported by NCI [Grant UH3CA220642].

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