Dear Editor,Receiving a cancer diagnosis is a traumatic life event that impacts not only the patients but also their families[1].Parents of patients with a cancer diagnosed in early life might experience a life crisis...Dear Editor,Receiving a cancer diagnosis is a traumatic life event that impacts not only the patients but also their families[1].Parents of patients with a cancer diagnosed in early life might experience a life crisis with various negative emotions,including the difficult decision-making in cancer treatment,concerns related to the side effects of the treatment and comorbidities,the worry for progression and relapse of the cancer and the risk of loss of the child due to death,as well as the physical demand of caregiving[2,3].展开更多
Dear Editor,The increasing number of men who undergo workup for suspected prostate cancer are subject to severe emotional stress[1].Stress levels seem to be elevated as soon as a suspicion of cancer is raised and the ...Dear Editor,The increasing number of men who undergo workup for suspected prostate cancer are subject to severe emotional stress[1].Stress levels seem to be elevated as soon as a suspicion of cancer is raised and the waiting time before a final diagnosis may be equally stressful as the post-diagnostic period[1,2].We recently demonstrated a marked increase in risk for different psychiatric disorders during the six months before prostate cancer diagnosis,highlighting the potential impact of emotional stress experienced while waiting for the diagnosis[3].展开更多
基金supported by the Swedish Cancer Society(grant number:200846 PjF to Fang Fang)Karolinska Institutet(Senior Researcher Award and Strategic Research Area in Epidemiology to Fang Fang)+6 种基金the China Scholarship Council(grant number:201700260291 to QL,grant number:201700260276 to Dang Wei)the Novo Nordisk Foundation(grant number:NNF18OC0052029 to Jiong Li)the Independent Research Fund Denmark(grant number:DFF-6110-00019B,DFF-9039-00010B and DFF-1030-00012B to Jiong Li)Nordic Cancer Union(grant number:R275-A15770 and R278-A15877 to Jiong Li)the Karen Elise Jensens Fond(2016 to Jiong Li)the Swedish Heart and Lung Foundation(grant number:20180306 to Krisztina D László)the Swedish Council for Working Life and Social Research(grant number:2015-00837 to Krisztina D László).
文摘Dear Editor,Receiving a cancer diagnosis is a traumatic life event that impacts not only the patients but also their families[1].Parents of patients with a cancer diagnosed in early life might experience a life crisis with various negative emotions,including the difficult decision-making in cancer treatment,concerns related to the side effects of the treatment and comorbidities,the worry for progression and relapse of the cancer and the risk of loss of the child due to death,as well as the physical demand of caregiving[2,3].
基金This study was funded by The Swedish Cancer Society(CF2016/795 and 2018/765)and Nyckelfonden,Örebro,Swe-den(2015).
文摘Dear Editor,The increasing number of men who undergo workup for suspected prostate cancer are subject to severe emotional stress[1].Stress levels seem to be elevated as soon as a suspicion of cancer is raised and the waiting time before a final diagnosis may be equally stressful as the post-diagnostic period[1,2].We recently demonstrated a marked increase in risk for different psychiatric disorders during the six months before prostate cancer diagnosis,highlighting the potential impact of emotional stress experienced while waiting for the diagnosis[3].