What is it about?
Healthy behaviors have been associated with longer survival in patients with colorectal cancer (CRC). Yet, many individuals fail to adopt healthy habits. This study examined whether anxiety and depression are risk factors of an unhealthy lifestyle, which is an aggregate of key health behaviors, among patients with CRC over two decades.
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Why is it important?
Our findings showed that patients with colorectal cancer who have higher symptoms of anxiety and depression symptoms are significantly more likely to have an unhealthy lifestyle, up to 10 years after being diagnosed. Hence, interventions that aim to lower anxiety and depression in this population may not only improve mental health but also decrease the likelihood of adopting multiple unfavorable health behaviors that are linked to reduced longevity.
Perspectives
While there has been research linking anxiety and depression symptoms to individual unhealthy behaviors, it was stimulating to assess for the first time the role of psychological symptoms in the likelihood of adopting an unhealthy lifestyle in patients with colorectal cancer, given that multiple co-occurring unfavorable habits have a multiplicative impact on premature mortality. Having access to such rich and well-characterized epidemiological data also allowed us to examine the association over two decades, which provides insight about the long-term detrimental effect of psychological symptoms on health behaviors that matter for health and longevity.
Claudia Trudel-Fitzgerald
Harvard University
Read the Original
This page is a summary of: Psychological symptoms and subsequent healthy lifestyle after a colorectal cancer diagnosis., Health Psychology, March 2018, American Psychological Association (APA),
DOI: 10.1037/hea0000571.
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