Coping and Post-Traumatic Growth
Cross-source consensus on Coping and Post-Traumatic Growth from 1 sources and 5 claims.
1 sources · 5 claims
How it works
Benefits
Risks & contraindications
Highlighted claims
- Initial coping responses were predominantly avoidant, with most participants withdrawing socially to escape scrutiny and the need to explain their illness. — Qualitative study on body image disturbance in young and middle-aged women with breast cancer in China
- Social withdrawal reduced immediate stress but reinforced isolation and hindered social reintegration. — Qualitative study on body image disturbance in young and middle-aged women with breast cancer in China
- Resilience emerged alongside continued distress rather than replacing it. — Qualitative study on body image disturbance in young and middle-aged women with breast cancer in China
- Maternal identity was a key motivating force for survival, binding the desire to live to family purpose rather than self-interest. — Qualitative study on body image disturbance in young and middle-aged women with breast cancer in China
- A subset of participants described post-traumatic growth — a shift from passive endurance toward active meaning-making and identity reconstruction. — Qualitative study on body image disturbance in young and middle-aged women with breast cancer in China