Subscribe by email
To stay updated on the latest news and information released, simply type in your address below and click subscribe.
Cancer Council seeks participants in world-first study on spiritual wellbeing
On the eve of Daffodil Day, Cancer Council Australia is launching a world-first study to further our understanding of how spiritual wellbeing affects quality of life for those affected by cancer.
The study will seek to measure the importance of feelings such as hope, love, peace and forgiveness and their impact on patients’ emotional and physical wellbeing- such as energy levels and pain- at different stages of the cancer journey.
Cancer patients, survivors, friends, family members, professional and informal carers and even people who have never been affected by cancer are being sought to take part in an online questionnaire.
Cancer Council Australia researcher Dr Hayley Whitford, based at The University of Adelaide, and Cancer Council Australia CEO, Professor Ian Olver, will analyse the information provided to determine which aspects of spiritual wellbeing, including the less acknowledged aspects such as appreciation and connectedness, are the most important in improving cancer patients’ resilience and quality of life.
Professor Olver said it was an important area of research for anyone coping with, or treating, cancer. “This study builds on a decade of research on hope and spiritual wellbeing and is the first of its kind to attempt to psychometrically assess the underlying aspects of spiritual wellbeing such as love, peace, meaning and faith, and how they each affect people’s resilience against depression, anxiety and stress,” he said.
“It’s also unique because it aims to compare the experiences of people at different stages of the cancer journey and which aspects of wellbeing are the most important at which stage. This will help us better support the emotional needs of cancer patients and their families in the areas they need it most, when they need it most.”
The theme for Daffodil Day this year [Friday August 24th] is ‘grow hope’. Every daffodil and every donation grows hope for better treatments, support, and a cancer-free future. Cancer Council is aiming to raise $9.2million from Daffodil Day.
If you are aged 18 or over, whether you have had a diagnosis of cancer, are a cancer survivor, have been a carer of someone with cancer, or even if you have never had a cancer experience, you can take part in the research by simply completing an online questionnaire now and again in six months. It should take 20 to 30 minutes.
You can also ask family and friends to take part.
Find out more and complete the questionnaire at www.cancer.org.au/2020vision
Media contact:
Abby Samuel
Phone: (02) 8063 4153
Mobile: 0432 693 315
abby.samuel@cancer.org.au

























