About this Research Topic
The role of clinical psychology in the management of cancer patients covers with different levels: screening, diagnosis and treatment of psychological distress. This latter can develops as a clear psychiatric disturbance but also as subclinical psychological symptoms that are often under-recognized and, consequently, under-treated.
Given the role that psychological well-being may have on the cancer pathology course, it is clinically outstanding to screen, diagnose and treat clinical and subclinical psychological disturbances.
This call welcomes contributions to the following issues, all related to the psychological response of patients to cancer:
- Screening and diagnosis of psychological distress.
- The diagnosis of cancer as a “trauma”.
- Psychological treatments for cancer patients, including end of life interventions.
- Relatives burden, including the impact of cancer on children.
- The impact of cancer on interpersonal relationships, intimacy and sexual wellbeing.
- New technologies (mHealth, Internet-based tools, Telecare, etc.) in psychoncology: ideas, projects and applications.
Contributes investigating the psychological factors that may influence the disease process are also considered.
All types of contributions including Research Reports, Reviews, Opinion or Hypothesis & Theory papers are welcomed.
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.