Saturday, May 18, 2024
ADVT 
Health & Fitness

Pouring emotion helps breast cancer survivors

Darpan News Desk IANS, 03 Aug, 2014 07:47 AM
  • Pouring emotion helps breast cancer survivors
Writing down fears, emotions and benefits of a cancer diagnosis may improve health outcomes for Asian-American breast cancer survivors, a research reveals.
 
"The key to developing an expressive writing intervention is the writing instruction. Otherwise, writing is just like a journal recording facts and events," said Qian Lu, assistant professor and director of the culture and health research centre at University of Houston (UH).
 
In her research, Lu found some of the challenges with the Asian-American breast cancer survivors were feeling stigmatised, shame associated with cancer, cultural beliefs of bearing the burden alone to avoid disrupting harmony and suppressing emotions.
 
Lu's research team asked participants to write 20 minutes each week for three weeks.
 
Three sealed envelopes were mailed simultaneously to the participants with each envelope containing different writing instructions for the corresponding week.
 
The findings suggest participants perceived the writing task to be easy, revealed their emotions, and disclosed their experiences in writing that they had not previously told others.
 
"Participants reported that they wrote down whatever they thought and felt and perceived the intervention to be appropriate and valuable," Lu added.
 
Previous research has found that writing about emotionally difficult events for just 20 to 30 minutes at a time over three or four days increased the immune function.
 
The release offered by writing had a direct impact on the body's capacity to withstand stress and fight off infection and disease.
 
"In my research, I found long-term physical and psychological health benefits when research participants wrote about their deepest fears and the benefits of a breast cancer diagnosis," Lu contended.
 
The study appeared in the journal Health Psychology.

MORE Health & Fitness ARTICLES

Some jobs increase risk of heart disease

Some jobs increase risk of heart disease
Want to know if your job can give you a heart attack? Workers in service and blue-collar occupations as well as unemployed people are...

Some jobs increase risk of heart disease

Why some people can cope with short sleep

Why some people can cope with short sleep
Most people require seven to nine hours of sleep to have proper daytime functioning, but some people can function normally on less than six hours of sleep...

Why some people can cope with short sleep

'Increasing alcohol cost curbs harmful drinking'

'Increasing alcohol cost curbs harmful drinking'
Reducing alcohol's affordability is the most effective way to reduce alcohol-related harm in people, says a study...

'Increasing alcohol cost curbs harmful drinking'

Share domestic chores for super sex life

Share domestic chores for super sex life
Do you often ignore sharing household chores with your spouse? Start helping her from now on as it comes with an extra incentive - better, hotter sex....

Share domestic chores for super sex life

Body, health myths exposed

Body, health myths exposed
From drinking eight glasses of water everyday to eating food before going to bed helps in storing fat are some of the health guidelines that doctors....

Body, health myths exposed

Healthy lifestyle can fight stress-related ageing

Healthy lifestyle can fight stress-related ageing
Typical experiences of life stressors like death, care-giving and job loss may accelerate cellular ageing, but these negative effects may be reduced by...

Healthy lifestyle can fight stress-related ageing

PrevNext