1. Introduction
Diagnosis and treatment of cancer is usually associated with many negative experiences for the patient [
1]. Chronic diseases result in the occurrence of chronic stress for the patient, as well as changes in lifestyle and social roles, and experiencing pain and discomfort, to which the patient must adapt. Mental adjustment to the disease is a process aimed at removing emotional discomfort and restoring a state of mental balance of a person suffering from cancer. Adjustment to the disease is used to cope directly with the disease, but also with situations related to the disease, e.g., treatment or changes in the patient’s life [
2].
The model of adjusting to cancer developed by Watson et al. includes five main adjustment attitudes: fighting spirit, avoidance–denial, fatalism–stoic acceptance, helplessness–hopelessness, anxiety [
3]. Research conducted using this model indicates that fighting spirit is associated with low external control and high social support, while helplessness–hopelessness—with high external control and low social support. Helplessness–hopelessness manifests itself with a sense of hopelessness and helplessness, passivity, anxiety, low spirits, and depression in patients, while anxiety manifests itself with an anxious attitude towards the diagnosis and the entire therapeutic process, as well as, among others, with hypochondrial behavior [
2,
3,
4]. In turn, patients using constructive strategies to deal with cancer are characterized by a higher quality of life and a better prognosis regarding survival and remission periods [
2,
5,
6].
The mini-Mental Adjustment to Cancer (mini-MAC) questionnaire is a well-recognized and used tool in measuring coping strategies among cancer patients in five basic areas [
7]. The mini-MAC questionnaire has been translated and adapted in many countries, including in China [
8], Portugal [
9], Italy [
10], Greece [
11], Korea [
12], Iran [
13], and Norway [
14].
Although the original version of the mini-MAC test covered five areas of mental adjustment to the disease, validation studies justify four areas [
15]. Studies using the mini-MAC questionnaire are usually conducted on small groups of patients [
16]; therefore, it is necessary to check repeatability of results obtained on a large group of patients.
The main objective of the study was to assess the appropriateness of using the mini-MAC questionnaire, measuring the level of adjustment to the disease among patients with malignant cancers.
4. Discussion
Changes caused by cancer result not only in physical and social difficulties for the patient, but also in psychological disorders resulting from chronic stress, which most often include depression, anxiety, and sleep disorders. It is indicated that depression occurs in 20–40% of cancer patients, and sleep disorders in up to 50% of patients [
19].
Research indicates that active strategies increase the quality of life, and high levels of helplessness–hopelessness are associated with low quality of life. In addition, the level of social functioning decreases as the intensity of anxiety increases, and in the case of growth in the intensity of helplessness–hopelessness, the level of professional, cognitive, and social functioning decreases [
20,
21]. In turn, patients intensely applying constructive strategies of coping with the disease function better physically and socially compared with patients showing low and medium intensity of constructive strategy of coping with the disease, while patients showing medium and high intensity of constructive strategies of coping with the disease demonstrate better emotional and cognitive functioning [
2].
In the study of mental adjustment of cancer patients, Kulpa et al. indicated that positive reevaluation at a high level was present in 74% of people, and its average result was M = 20.7. Fighting spirit at a high level was present in 66% of patients, and the average result for this strategy was M = 19.75, which is a high score [
2]. Anxiety at a high level was present in 47% of respondents, and the average result for anxiety was M = 18.6, which is a moderate result. A high level of helplessness–hopelessness occurred in 31% of patients, and the average result for this strategy was M = 15.9, which is an average result. The overall average intensity of the constructive strategies and of the destructive strategies was the same for both strategies M = 40.4 [
2]. The authors’ study indicates a slightly higher result achieved for the constructive strategies and a lower result for the destructive strategies.
Active strategies dominate among people with prostate cancer, and the study conducted by Kulpa et al. indicates that the destructive strategies are associated with a higher severity of anxiety and a greater propensity to perceive a situation as threatening [
6].
Dominating strategies applied to adjust to the disease among patients with gynecological cancers include fighting spirit (M = 21.51; SD = 2.96) and positive reevaluation (M = 21.45; SD = 2.46). The median value of anxiety was M = 17.36 (SD = 4.40), and of helplessness–hopelessness—M = 13.87 (SD = 4.04). The results of this study indicate that respondents whose illness lasted more than two years more often (
p = 0.003) used the strategy of helplessness–hopelessness than those who had been ill for less than two years, and women who did not experience complications during treatment showed a stronger fighting spirit than those who experienced complications (
p = 0.05) [
22].
Similarly, in the case of women with cervical cancer after surgical treatment, it was indicated that constructive strategies prevailed: fighting spirit (M = 22.63; SD = 2.88) and positive reevaluation (M = 21.10; SD = 2.64), while the destructive strategies reached the values of: anxiety M = 16.07 (SD = 4.42) and helplessness–hopelessness M = 12.63 (SD = 3.76) [
23].
However, Rogala et al., studying women with breast cancer, did not indicate differences in the mental adjustment to the disease depending on the length of the disease or other factors studied (age, marital status, place of residence) [
23]. The studied women were primarily characterized by fighting spirit (M = 23.9; SD = 2.8) and positive reevaluation (M = 23.5; SD = 2.8). Anxiety reached an average of M = 15.6 (SD = 4.6), and helplessness–hopelessness of M = 12.0 (SD = 3.6) [
24].
Sobieralska-Michalak et al., assessing mental adjustment among breast cancer patients depending on the type of surgery (amputation or conservative surgery), indicated that both groups of patients choose the constructive strategies to adjust to cancer [
25]. Similar results for particular strategies were obtained by Szczepańska-Gieracha et al., comparing mental adjustment to the disease of patients with breast cancer and cancer of reproductive organs, where there were also no significant differences between the studied groups [
26].
In patients with colorectal cancer treated with chemotherapy, the results were also similar to those obtained by other authors: fighting spirit M = 23.9, positive reevaluation M = 22.5, anxiety M = 16.1, and helplessness–hopelessness M = 12.3 [
27].
The authors’ research results show that in cancer patients, strategies of fighting spirit and positive reevaluation are dominant. The study conducted by Krawczyk et al. showed that patients with lung cancer are also characterized by fighting spirit (M = 23.00; SD = 3.27) and positive reevaluation (M = 21.69; SD = 2.39), while strategies of anxiety and helplessness–hopelessness achieved much lower values (respectively, M = 15.94; SD = 3.72 for anxiety and M = 12.39; SD = 3.32 for helplessness–hopelessness) [
28].
Fighting spirit also dominates in patients with head and neck cancers (M = 25.0; SD = 2.6). Patients with head and neck cancers choose positive reevaluation (M = 23.6, SD = 2.2), followed by anxiety (M = 16.1; SD = 4.8) and helplessness–hopelessness (M = 12.5; SD = 3.3) as a strategy to adjust to the disease [
29].
In turn, patients with laryngeal cancer in the study conducted by Humeniuk et al. achieved the highest value of the mini-MAC questionnaire in the areas of anxiety (M = 21.8), and positive reevaluation (M = 21.4). Better adjustment to the disease was observed among women, people with higher education, and living in stable relationships with children [
30].
In the study of patients with various types of cancer, the average results of individual adjustment strategies were as follows: fighting spirit M = 22.91 (SD = 3.24), positive reevaluation M = 22.07 (SD = 2.67), anxiety M = 19.25 (SD = 3.08), helplessness–hopelessness M = 16.72 (SD = 3.38), and the choice of strategy was not influenced by the studied sociodemographic factors [
31].
However, in the study conducted by Baczewska et al., it was found that in the case of adjusting to cancer by patients undergoing chemotherapy, the choice of strategy is differentiated by gender and age. In this study, women demonstrated significantly more intense helplessness–hopelessness and anxiety (
p = 0.034) and a sense of helplessness–hopelessness (
p = 0.017) increased with age, with a simultaneous decrease in the value of fighting spirit (
p = 0.022) [
32]. Intensity of the destructive strategies, anxiety, and depression in women is also indicated in other studies, e.g., Ziętalewicz et al. [
33].
In the study conducted among people with newly diagnosed thyroid cancer and its recurrence, it was proven that in the group of people with newly diagnosed disease, the destructive strategy was low (M = 31.62), and the constructive strategy was assessed as high (M = 44.6). In patients experiencing recurrence, the destructive strategy prevailed over the constructive one, with M = 45.26 and M = 39.88, respectively [
34].
Studying patients with diagnosed stomach cancer, cancer of reproductive organs, pancreatic cancer, colorectal cancer, and prostate cancer under palliative care in hospital and at home, Kozak emphasizes the intensification of helplessness–hopelessness, which was the dominant strategy for this group (M = 19.89; SD = 6.74) [
35]. It was observed that men with prostate cancer showed the highest intensity of anxiety, while women with cancer of reproductive organs—the lowest; fighting spirit was a dominating strategy among them. The strategy of helplessness–hopelessness also occurred at the highest intensity in patients with prostate cancer, and in the lowest—in women with gynecological cancers [
35].
Studies of young cancer patients indicate that the most frequently chosen strategy for the adjustment to the disease was fighting spirit (M = 23.2); the constructive style was dominant, and gender, place of residence, or duration of the disease did not differentiate the results obtained [
36].
Kapela et al. indicated that the manner of mental adjustment to the disease is affected by the degree of its acceptance—the higher the level of acceptance of the disease, the higher the level on the scale of fighting spirit and the higher the level on the scale of the constructive style [
27]. Milaniak et al. indicated the influence of optimism on the chosen strategies of mental adjustment to the disease, in particular fighting spirit [
29].
Numerous authors proved the relationship between the chosen style of adjustment to cancer and the quality of life, indicating that patients using the constructive strategies assessed their quality of life as higher, and passive attitudes, including anxiety or helplessness–hopelessness negatively affects the patients’ quality of life [
2,
3,
4,
37,
38]. Anxiety and helplessness–hopelessness additionally exacerbate the symptoms of depression and fear in patients [
39,
40].
The effect of attitude towards the disease on patients’ prognosis in terms of survival and remission periods was also proven. Fighting spirit results in higher remission and survival rates than the destructive and passive strategies [
3,
6,
17]. Fighting spirit also affects the better functioning of patients in the physical, emotional, cognitive, and social areas compared to those choosing the strategy of helplessness–hopelessness in the face of illness [
2]. However, Boryczko-Pater et al. indicated that the style of adjustment to cancer can change over time towards more active strategies [
41].