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Review

Thriving after hematopoietic stem cell transplant: a focus on positive changes in quality of life

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Pages 111-123 | Published online: 09 Jan 2014

References

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  • ••One of the first studies of hematopoieticstem cell transplant (HSCT) patients to identify both losses and gains (ten each) through qualitative responses of patients following the transplant experience.
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  • ••Investigation of negative and positivepersonal changes experience by HSCT survivors and the relationship between those changes to adjustment and mood, life satisfaction and optimism.
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  • ••First study to use of a quantitative measureof positive gains following HSCT. Includes excellent suggestions for future studies and for reconceptualization of the transplant experience as psychosocial transition.
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  • Special issue: thriving: broadening the paradigm beyond illness to health. I Soc Issues. 54(2), (1998).
  • ••Interesting and useful set of articles delineating theoretical, conceptual and methodological issues of 'thriving' research.
  • Calhoun LG, Tedeschi RG. The foundations of posttraumatic growth: new perspectives. PTchological Ind. (2003) (In Press).
  • Calhoun LG, Tedeschi RG. Facilitating Post-traumatic Growth: a Clinician's Guide. Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Mahwah, NJ, USA (1999).
  • •Includes suggestions for clinician's interested in facilitating post-traumatic growth in their clients.
  • Johnson Vickberg SM, DuHamel KN, Smith MY et al Global meaning and psychological adjustment among survivors of bone marrow transplantation. PTchooncology10, 29–39 (2001).
  • Xuereb MC, Dunlop R. The Experience of leukemia and bone marrow transplant: searching for meaning and agency. PTchooncology12,397–409 (2003).

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