Onco-Cruise data before and after the cruise in the experimental and control group

Published: 27 May 2025| Version 1 | DOI: 10.17632/tvr4x2ghss.1
Contributor:
Julia Wyszomirska

Description

The study hypothesized that participation in a week-long therapeutic sailing intervention (Onco-Cruise) would lead to significant improvements in psychological well-being, stress reduction, and adaptive coping among women with oncological diseases, compared to a matched control group awaiting participation. The research applied a quasi-experimental design with two groups: - experimental group (n = 29): participated in a one-week Onco-Cruise in 2021, - control group (n = 21): women qualified for future cruises (did not sail during the study period). Data collection occurred at two time points: 2 weeks before the intervention, 2 weeks after the intervention. Participants completed standardized, validated psychological questionnaires measuring: perceived stress (PSS-10), global mental health (GHQ-28), well-being (WHO-5), mental adjustment to cancer (Mini-MAC), self-efficacy (GSES), illness acceptance (AIS), life satisfaction (SWLS), sense of coherence (SOC-29), optimism (LOT-R), self-esteem (SES). Sociodemographic and clinical data (diagnosis, treatment type, comorbidities, medication, sailing experience) were also collected via self-report but these data containing information that could compromise the privacy of research participants, it is only available upon request from the corresponding author.

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Institutions

  • Slaski Uniwersytet Medyczny w Katowicach

Categories

Medicine, Health Sciences, Health Psychology

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