Background: Cancer significantly impacts adolescents’ and young adults’ (AYAs’) identity.1 Little is known about whether AYAs adopt a ‘cancer survivor’ identity, and whether a ‘survivor-centric’ identity is linked with psychological outcomes into survivorship.1,2
Objective: To explore prevalence and predictors of AYAs’ cancer-related identity preferences in survivorship, and examine associations with their psychological adjustment.
Method: Across two studies, two items explored AYAs’ cancer-related identity preferences: firstly, using a 10-point sliding-scale, and then with seven categorical label-options (e.g., ‘cancer survivor’, ‘victim of cancer’), alongside psychological measures (Depression and Anxiety Scale-Short;3 Centrality of Events;4 Impact of Cancer5). Study 1’s cross-sectional questionnaire-design compared AYAs in survivorship, with controls (who appraised non-cancer illness experiences). Study 2 enabled observation of AYAs’ cancer-identity preferences over a 12-month period following treatment-completion, within the Recapture Life intervention randomised-trial.6,7
Results: Study 1: AYAs with a cancer history endorsed more ‘survivor-centric’ identity than controls (p<.001). Greater perceived cancer-centrality, and lower depression, predicted greater survivor-identity (p=.001). Study 2: At baseline, AYAs preferred the term ‘cancer survivor’ (mean=7.4, SD=1.9), with ‘cancer survivor’ chosen most frequently (36%), followed by ‘had cancer once, but is fine now’ (21%). A strong positive linear relationship indicated that more survivor-centric identity was associated with more positive perceived impact of cancer, over time (t(1,84)=2.6615;p=0.009).
Conclusions: AYAs’ self-identification as ‘survivor’ appears linked with their wellbeing into survivorship. Yet, when given choices, AYAs identify with diverse cancer-identities. This talk will consider how clinicians, researchers, and communities may support an AYA-led approach to framing the cancer survivorship experience for – and with – AYAs.