Acceptance in Patients With Cancer: A Scoping Review
Joost Dekker, Chris Welling, Mariette Labots

TL;DR
This review explores how cancer patients accept their diagnosis and prognosis, aiming to help clinicians better support them.
Contribution
The study provides a comprehensive overview of the current, diverse research on acceptance in cancer patients.
Findings
Acceptance is defined and measured in various ways across studies.
Factors associated with acceptance were identified, though definitions and focuses are inconsistent.
The field is relatively new and lacks a unified definition of acceptance.
Abstract
Cancer is generally perceived as a major stressor. Occasionally, patients are able to accept their diagnosis and prognosis, and it is not uncommon for patients who initially experience great distress to eventually learn to accept their disease. A deeper understanding of acceptance can enable clinicians to better support patients in achieving a more peaceful state of mind. The purpose of this literature review was to provide a comprehensive overview of existing research on acceptance in patients with cancer. Study selection resulted in the inclusion of 54 studies. All studies except one were published after the year 2000. Acceptance was defined in terms of cognition, emotion, behavior, spiritual processes, social processes, or other terms. Acceptance focused on disease, illness, cancer, poor prognosis/imminent death, or was not specified, and was measured by interview or questionnaire.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCancer survivorship and care · Mindfulness and Compassion Interventions · Diabetes Management and Education
