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Psychology & Developing Societies
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Health Beliefs and Behaviour of Cervix Cancer Patients

P. AwasthiI

P. Awasthi is lecturer in psychology at Vasant Kanya Mahavidyalay, Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi. She is primarily interested in the study of health beliefs and practices, and their application to community health development.

R. C. Mishra

Ramesh C. Mishra is Professor of Psychology, Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi. He has published in the fields of cognition, acculturation, schooling, and cross–cultural studies.

U.P. Shahi

U.P. Shahi is Senior Reader in the Department of Radiotherapy and Radiation Medicine, Institute of Medical Sciences, Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi. His interests include the psychology of cancer patients and their rehabilitation processes.

When people fall prey to a chronic disease they develop their own formulations about the disease. Patients often hold a variety of beliefs about causes, consequences, control and outcomes of the disease. This study examines illness beliefs and health seeking behaviour of educated, uneducated, rural and urban women suffering from the cancer of cervix. A control group (of non–patients) was also studied. The findings revealed that individual and psychosocial causes were more strongly represented in the belief system of patients than environmental or supernatural causes. The perceived consequence of illness was negatively correlated with the degree of social support available to patients. Patients characterised by a high level of social support strongly believed that their disease was in control of either "self " or "doctor". They resorted more to "approach–coping" strategy, experienced lesser pain and severity of illness, and expressed greater hope for a disease free life than patients characterised by low social support.

Psychology & Developing Societies, Vol. 18, No. 1, 37-58 (2006)
DOI: 10.1177/097133360501800103


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P. Awasthi and R.C. Mishra
Role of Coping Strategies and Social Support in Perceived Illness Consequences and Controllability among Diabetic Women
Psychology Developing Societies, December 1, 2007; 19(2): 179 - 197.
[Abstract] [PDF]