학술논문

Social support and substitute voice acquisition on psychological adjustment among patients after laryngectomy
Document Type
Original Paper
Source
European Archives of Oto-Rhino-Laryngology: and Head & Neck. March 2017 274(3):1557-1565
Subject
Social support
Substitute voice acquisition
Psychological adjustment
Laryngectomy
Language
English
ISSN
0937-4477
1434-4726
Abstract
The objective is to clarify whether social support and acquisition of alternative voice enhance the psychological adjustment of laryngectomized patients and which part of the psychological adjustment structure would be influenced by social support. We contacted 1445 patients enrolled in a patient association using mail surveys and 679 patients agreed to participate in the study. The survey items included age, sex, occupation, post-surgery duration, communication method, psychological adjustment (by the Nottingham Adjustment Scale Japanese Laryngectomy Version: NAS-J-L), and the formal support (by Hospital Patient Satisfaction Questionnaire-25: HPSQ-25). Social support and communication methods were added to the three-tier structural model of psychological adjustment shown in our previous study, and a covariance structure analysis was conducted. Formal/informal supports and acquisition of alternative voice influence only the “recognition of oneself as voluntary agent”, the first tier of the three-tier structure of psychological adjustment. The results suggest that social support and acquisition of alternative voice may enhance the recognition of oneself as voluntary agent and promote the psychological adjustment.