Project Details
Men´s utilization of control strategies and spousal support after prostatectomy: Managing autonomy in the face of postoperative morbidities
Applicant
Professorin Dr. Nina Knoll
Subject Area
Personality Psychology, Clinical and Medical Psychology, Methodology
Term
from 2009 to 2012
Project identifier
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 107867274
Following radical prostatectomy (RP), postoperative morbidities (e.g., urinary incontinence) place new challenges upon patients’ autonomy and well-being. To meet these challenges, the Life-Span Theory of Control suggests that individuals actively regulate their development by adjusting goals and by using control strategies for goal attainment. By mobilization of external help, such control-strategy use can be extended to incorporate dynamics of enacted social support. Aims of this study are the investigation of patients’ short- and longer-term changes in control- strategy use, utilization of spousal support, and long-term changes in autonomy-related goals (“Lines of Defense”). Also, these factors’ potential protective functions for patients’ and their spouses’ immediate and long-term adaptation to patients’ postoperative morbidities are studied. A total of 206 RP patients and their partners will be recruited for participation in a prospective, combined diary and questionnaire study spanning about 8 months perisurgery. Studying patients’ immediate responses to postoperative morbidity with a diary approach and their assumed general readjustment as convalescence progresses will promote new insights into the dynamics of patients’ self-regulative functioning and their influence on spouses’ well being and capacity to yield support.
DFG Programme
Research Grants
Participating Persons
Dr. Isolde Daig; Professor Dr. Mark Schrader