Mindfulness and Basic Hope in Patients with Pelvic Cancer: Examining Illness Acceptance and Fear of Recurrence Within a Multiple Mediation Model
false
- Tytuł: Mindfulness and Basic Hope in Patients with Pelvic Cancer: Examining Illness Acceptance and Fear of Recurrence Within a Multiple Mediation Model
- Autor/Autorzy:
- Nazwa czasopisma: Brain Sciences
- Rok: 2026
- Tom: 16
- Numer: 5
- ISSN: 2076-3425
- e-ISSN: 2976-3425
- DOI: 10.3390/brainsci16050503
- Adres www:: https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3425/16/5/503/pdf
- Strony od-do: 1-20
- Abstrakt: Background/Objectives: Mindfulness has been identified as a protective factor in promoting adaptive psychological outcomes among cancer patients, yet the mechanisms linking mindfulness to fundamental existential beliefs, such as basic hope, remain underexplored. In addition, mediational processes underlying these relationships remain understudied. Building on the theoretical framework of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy, we tested a serial multiple mediation model in which illness acceptance and fear of recurrence sequentially mediated the association between mindfulness and basic hope. Methods: Adult patients diagnosed with pelvic cancer (N = 273) who were undergoing oncological treatment completed questionnaires measuring mindfulness, illness acceptance, fear of recurrence, and basic hope. Mediation analysis was used to examine multiple mediation effects. Results: Illness acceptance also functioned as a single mediator between mindfulness and basic hope. In contrast, fear of recurrence was not a mediator between mindfulness and basic hope. The main finding was the serial mediation pathway through illness acceptance and fear of recurrence. The indirect effects showed that mindfulness was positively associated with illness acceptance dimensions—life satisfaction during illness, reconciliation with the disease, and self-distancing from the disease—which, in turn, were negatively associated with fear of recurrence, ultimately relating to higher levels of basic hope. Conclusions: The findings highlight the critical role of acceptance- and fear-related processes in sustaining basic hope among cancer patients and suggest that mindfulness-based interventions may foster adaptive adjustment to illness. Implications for clinical practice include integrating mindfulness and acceptance-focused strategies to enhance hope and support emotional well-being in patients coping with cancer.
- Dyscyplina: psychologia
false
- 002 a Mindfulness and Basic Hope in Patients with Pelvic Cancer: Examining Illness Acceptance and Fear of Recurrence Within a Multiple Mediation Model
- 003 b 0000-0002-6336-7251
- 003 a Dariusz Krok (Autor)
- 003 a Ewa Telka (Autor)
- 003 a Mariusz G. Kuźniar (Autor)
- 003 a Sebastian Skalski-Bednarz (Autor)
- 004 a Oryginalny artykuł naukowy
- 006 a Brain Sciences
- 008 a 2026
- 009 a 16
- 010 a 5
- 011 a 2076-3425
- 012 a 2976-3425
- 013 a 10.3390/brainsci16050503
- 014 a https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3425/16/5/503/pdf
- 015 a 1-20
- 020 a Background/Objectives: Mindfulness has been identified as a protective factor in promoting adaptive psychological outcomes among cancer patients, yet the mechanisms linking mindfulness to fundamental existential beliefs, such as basic hope, remain underexplored. In addition, mediational processes underlying these relationships remain understudied. Building on the theoretical framework of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy, we tested a serial multiple mediation model in which illness acceptance and fear of recurrence sequentially mediated the association between mindfulness and basic hope. Methods: Adult patients diagnosed with pelvic cancer (N = 273) who were undergoing oncological treatment completed questionnaires measuring mindfulness, illness acceptance, fear of recurrence, and basic hope. Mediation analysis was used to examine multiple mediation effects. Results: Illness acceptance also functioned as a single mediator between mindfulness and basic hope. In contrast, fear of recurrence was not a mediator between mindfulness and basic hope. The main finding was the serial mediation pathway through illness acceptance and fear of recurrence. The indirect effects showed that mindfulness was positively associated with illness acceptance dimensions—life satisfaction during illness, reconciliation with the disease, and self-distancing from the disease—which, in turn, were negatively associated with fear of recurrence, ultimately relating to higher levels of basic hope. Conclusions: The findings highlight the critical role of acceptance- and fear-related processes in sustaining basic hope among cancer patients and suggest that mindfulness-based interventions may foster adaptive adjustment to illness. Implications for clinical practice include integrating mindfulness and acceptance-focused strategies to enhance hope and support emotional well-being in patients coping with cancer.
- 022 a basic hope
- 022 a fear of recurrence
- 022 a illness acceptance
- 022 a mindfulness
- 022 a multiple mediation
- 022 a pelvic cancer
- 966 a psychologia
- 985 a Wydział Filozoficzny
- 985 b Instytut Psychologii
false
false
- Title: Mindfulness and Basic Hope in Patients with Pelvic Cancer: Examining Illness Acceptance and Fear of Recurrence Within a Multiple Mediation Model
- Author:
- Journal: Brain Sciences
- Date: 2026
- Discipline: psychologia
- Słowa kluczowe w j. angielskim:
- Structure: