Adjustment and vocational satisfaction of patients treated during childhood or adolescence for acute lymphoblastic leukemia.

Authors
Category Primary study
JournalThe American journal of pediatric hematology/oncology
Year 1990
This investigation evaluated the psychosocial consequences of the diagnosis and treatment of acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) on the long-term adjustment of a sample of 46 patients less than 20 years of age at diagnosis (mean age: 7.46 years). Subjects were followed up for an average of 15.4 years after diagnosis and were a mean of 22.87 years old at assessment. A sample of Hodgkin's disease and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma survivors served as a comparison group. Patients completed standardized measures of well-being, stress reaction, vocational satisfaction, and a questionnaire assessing defensiveness regarding their history of cancer treatment, experienced job discrimination, and social involvement. Overall, the subjects appeared to be well-adjusted; female subjects, however, exhibited an increased tendency to experience anxiety in stressful situations. Vocational discrimination did not appear to be a significant problem for this group of survivors, and subjects exhibited levels of vocational satisfaction that did not differ from population norms. Greater defensiveness regarding a history of cancer treatment was associated with lower levels of well-being and heightened stress reaction. Survivors who received CNS prophylaxis that included cranial irradiation had lower well-being scores than did those survivors receiving only intrathecal methotrexate.
Epistemonikos ID: c5fad9fe8548f1f36022f542ba37231572deb03b
First added on: Jul 05, 2022