Background: Cancer is now recognized as a dyadic stress that seriously impacts the mental and physical well-being of both patients and their spousal caregivers (SCs). Analyzing from a dyadic perspective whether and how dyadic coping and family sense of coherence (FSOC) affect the quality of life (QOL) of couples is crucial.
Objective: To investigate the dyadic association between FSOC, dyadic coping, and QOL in young and middle-aged couples facing advanced lung cancer and to evaluate the mediating role of dyadic coping from a dyadic perspective.
Methods: From October 2023 to April 2024, 202 dyads were recruited from 2 tertiary care hospitals in Tianjin, China. The participants' measurement indicators were evaluated using corresponding questionnaires. The procedure for dyadic analysis was based on the Actor-Partner Interdependence Mediation Model.
Results: The actor effect of FSOC on the QOL was mediated by the dyadic coping of patients (β = .100; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.053-0.155; P = .001) and SCs (β = .124; 95% CI, 0.059-0.193; P = .002). The partner effect suggested that patients' QOL may be indirectly impacted by SCs' FSOC through patients' dyadic coping (β = .078; 95% CI, 0.038-0.127; P = .004).
Conclusions: The QOL, dyadic coping, and FSOC of young and middle-aged couples facing advanced lung cancer were dyadically interdependent. To enhance couples' QOL, strategies for intervention must be developed.
Implications for practice: This study offered a novel viewpoint on the relationship between QOL, dyadic coping, and FSOC and provided a theoretical foundation for the creation of dyadic intervention strategies meant to enhance cancer couples' QOL.
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