dc.description.abstract | Aim: Humour is seen as a health-promoting coping strategy when dealing with life stress. The aim is to elucidate
how adult cancer survivors experience and evaluate the
significance of humour in daily life, from diagnosis
through their entire illness trajectory, and to gain a
broader understanding of humour as part of stress-coping
processes during the experience of cancer as a life-threatening illness.<p>
<p>Method: A socio-narrative approach was chosen to study
the humorous stories and their use in everyday contexts.
Fourteen participants aged 23–83 with a variety of experiences across diagnoses, times since diagnosis, prognoses
and life situations were interviewed.<p>
<p>Findings: Participants described humour as helpful and
utilised its capacity to deal with difficult situations or
related distress, although fluctuations in the course of the
illness coincided with two extremes: humour that disappeared and humour that returned. Their use of humour
was related to three key themes: facing a life-threatening
situation, togetherness and communication, and living with the
situation.<p>
<p>Conclusion: Depending on the aim, humour contributes
variously through the stress-coping process within the
distinctions of emotion-, problem- and meaning-focused
coping. Humour served to relieve the anxiety burden,
enhance problem-solving ability, safeguard important
relationships, communicate difficult topics, regain identity and help significant others to cope, even enabling
the richness of life to help living with the risk. Humour
should be considered as a significant engaging coping
strategy by which the cancer survivors seek to manage
their situation throughout the illness trajectory. | en_US |