Skip to content

Kelly Chinh

Seattle Division, VA Puget Sound Health Care System, Seattle, Washington, USA.

1 paper in the library · 6 citations · publishing 2024

Papers

Preliminary validation of the Cognitive Affective Mindfulness Scale-Revised in cancer populations.

Psycho-oncology January 1, 2024 Stella Snyder, Ekin Secinti, Kelly Chinh et al. 6 citations

A 10-item version of the Cognitive Affective Mindfulness Scale-Revised (CAMS-R) shows promise for measuring mindfulness in people with cancer. In a sample of 404 patients with breast, gastrointestinal, lung, or prostate cancer (half with stage IV cancer, 51% women), the scale's original four-factor structure (attention, present focus, awareness, acceptance) with an overall mindfulness factor fit the data reasonably well. Internal consistency was excellent. Higher mindfulness scores correlated with greater self-compassion and lower anxiety, depressive symptoms, rumination, psychological inflexibility, and avoidant coping. The scale performed consistently across genders, cancer types, and cancer stages. Further research should test whether the CAMS-R can detect changes from mindfulness interventions.