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Dive into the research topics where F.J. van Zuuren is active.

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Featured researches published by F.J. van Zuuren.


Patient Education and Counseling | 1998

Experiences of parents of childhood cancer survivors: A qualitative analysis

J. E. W. M. Van Dongen-Melman; F.J. van Zuuren; Frank C. Verhulst

As the prognosis of childhood cancer improves, so does concern for the quality of survival. Because childhood cancer affects the entire family, insight is needed into the late consequences for parents and how they cope with it. For this purpose, a qualitative research method was used because this method enables a description of what it is like to live through childhood cancer in all its aspects. Parents whose child survived cancer were interviewed in depth about the late consequences of the disease. To maximize contrast in parental experience and in coping with the disease, variational sampling was used. Results indicated that parents experienced changes of a definitive and long-lasting nature as a result of cancer in their child. In spite of the childs survival, feelings of loss and perseveration of problems prevailed. To cope with late sequelae, characteristic strategies were identified including the position parents adopt a life or death perspective on the final outcome of the disease, the extent to which they express emotions, and the use of family planning and parenting behavior. Coping strategies used had not only an effect on the individual parent but also on the other family members. Parents who used coping strategies in a non-extreme way appeared to be functioning well. Implications for patient care and research are discussed.


Behaviour Research and Therapy | 1995

One-session cognitive treatment of dental phobia: preparing dental phobics for treatment by restructuring negative cognitions

A. de Jongh; Peter Muris; G. ter Horst; F.J. van Zuuren; N. Schoenmakers; P.C. Makkes

The purpose of this study was to investigate the effectiveness of a single session of cognitive restructuring in a sample of phobic dental patients. Fifty-two patients were randomly assigned to one of three conditions: cognitive restructuring (modification of negative cognitions), provision of information (about oral health and dental treatment), and a waiting list control condition. Both interventions maximally lasted one hour. In comparison with the waiting list control condition and the information intervention condition, the cognitive intervention condition not only showed a large decrease in frequency and believability of negative cognitions, but also exhibited a clear decline in dental trait anxiety. Analysis at a follow-up of one year demonstrated a further, drastic reduction in dental anxiety in both intervention conditions, wherein the difference among these conditions was not maintained. It is concluded that it is possible to obtain substantial reductions of dental trait anxiety through a single session of cognitive restructuring. Nevertheless, repeated exposure to the dental situation seems necessary for a further reduction of anxiety.


Personality and Individual Differences | 1996

Coping with medical threat: an evaluation of the Threatening Medical Situations Inventory (TMSI)

F.J. van Zuuren; K.I. de Groot; N. Mulder; Peter Muris

The Dutch Threatening Medical Situations Inventory (TMSI) has been developed to measure cognitive confrontation (‘monitoring’) and cognitive avoidance (‘blunting’) within the domain of medical threat. It consists of four scenarios of threatening medical situations, followed by monitoring and blunting alternatives. Its psychometric properties are investigated in students (N = 123), dental (N = 80), HIV-(N = 42) and surgery patients (N = 123). For both scales, internal consistencies proved to be satisfactory. Slight sex and age effects are found. Furthermore, there is a strong situation effect: the scenario highest in controllability shows relatively high monitoring and low blunting scores. Factor structure is stable across samples and shows a good fit with the predicted factor solution. Both scales are found to converge and diverge in a theoretically meaningful manner with a variety of coping style and anxiety measures. In two samples, a sample specific stress scenario was added, but the psychometric qualities of such an extension should not be taken for granted. In an additional sample of working people (N = 48) test-retest reliability proved to be good. It is concluded that the TMSI is a useful instrument for assessing cognitive confrontation and avoidance in medical patients. An English as well as a German translation are available.


Patient Education and Counseling | 1997

Uncertainty in the information provided during genetic counseling

F.J. van Zuuren; E.C.M. van Schie; N.K. van Baaren

Abstract Clients seek genetic counseling in order to become informed, to make better decisions, and, if possible, to be reassured. Genetic knowledge, however, is fragmentary and incomplete and therefore it may involve more uncertainty than is desirable. In a cohort of 30 counseling sessions we studied the genetic information that was actually conveyed in terms of its predictability, controllability and novelty. With regard to predictability it emerged to be rather the rule than the exception that clients of genetic counseling were confronted with (1) an inconclusive diagnosis, (2) the chance or an estimate of the chance of the occurrence or recurrence of a genetic disorder, and (3) ambiguity about the severity of the disease. In case of bad news, possibilities for control (therapeutic or preventive measures) were minimal. In a few cases, clients were confronted with completely unexpected findings, i.e., information of high novelty. It is concluded that the high degree of uncertainty in the information provided during genetic counseling – reflecting the true state of the art – is in direct contrast to the needs of clients.


Personality and Individual Differences | 1994

Monitoring and blunting coping styles: The Miller behavioural style scale and its correlates, and the development of an alternative questionnaire

Peter Muris; F.J. van Zuuren; de Peter Jong; E. de Beurs; Gerrit J. F. P. Hanewald

Abstract The present article presents two studies concerning the measurement of monitoring (information seeking under threat) and blunting (information avoidance) coping styles. Study 1 (n = 69) showed that the widely used Miller Behavioural Style Scale suffers from a number of weaknesses such as insufficient internal consistency, susceptibility to correlate with measures of anxiety and other psychopathology, poor quality of scenarios, and moderate face validity. In study 2 (n = 42), an alternative instrument is presented: the Monitoring-Blunting Questionnaire (MBQ). The MBQ has high face validity, good reliability, and is unrelated to trait anxiety. Furthermore, in a “thought experiment” some indications were found for the predictive validity of the MBQ.


Psycho-oncology | 2009

Coping with parental cancer: web-based peer support in children.

J. Giesbers; I.M. Verdonck-de Leeuw; F.J. van Zuuren; N. Kleverlaan; M.H.M. van der Linden

Objective: To investigate the use and content of web‐based peer support in children coping with parental cancer.


Behaviour Research and Therapy | 2002

Trauma-related sequelae in individuals with a high level of dental anxiety. Does this interfere with treatment outcome?

A. de Jongh; J. van der Burg; M. van Overmeir; I.H.A. Aartman; F.J. van Zuuren

This study assessed trauma-related sequelae of 56 highly anxious patients attending a dental fear clinic. It was also examined whether such symptomatology interferes with anxiety reduction in response to a cognitive-behavioral treatment approach. About 34 patients (59%) indicated that they had experienced one or more aversive dental events that could explain the onset of their dental anxiety. There was no difference between the dental anxiety scores of patients who reported such a background and those who did not. Severity of trauma-related symptomatology was indexed by the Impact of Event Scale (IES). The mean IES score of patients with a traumatically induced dental fear was remarkably high (33.0; SD=19.7). Furthermore, there was a strong direct relationship between severity of trauma-related symptomatology and severity of dental anxiety (shared variance was 38%). Two patients (10%) met all DSM-IV diagnostic criteria for Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) on the basis of the Self-Rating Scale for PTSD. However, no evidence was found to suggest that either a traumatic background, or level of trauma-related symptomatology, has a negative effect on treatment outcome.


Journal of Dental Research | 1994

Cognitive correlates of dental anxiety.

A. de Jongh; Peter Muris; G. ter Horst; F.J. van Zuuren; C.A.M. de Wit

This study examined cognitive correlates of dental anxiety among 24 highly anxious patients and 17 low-anxious patients. In both groups, anxiety expectations, dental trait anxiety, and state anxiety (in the waiting room and in the dental chair) were rated. Negative cognitions and cognitive control were also assessed. It was found that dentally high-anxious patientsclaimed toexperience more negative thoughts than those with low anxiety (p < 0.001). None of the highly anxious patients reported relatively few negative cognitions, and none of the patients in the low-anxiety group reported relatively numerous negative cognitions. While patients from both groups reported that cognitive control declined with the imminence of treatment, highly anxious patients were found to have less control over their negative thoughts (p < 0.001). A series of stepwise regression analyses revealed that both the number of negative cognitions and perceived cognitive control accounted for 75% of the variance in dental trait anxiety. The results of the present study suggest that cognitive activities, such as negative thinking (catastrophizing) and cognitive control, are important moderators of dental anxiety.


Personality and Individual Differences | 1994

Coping style, anxiety, cognitions, and cognitive control in dental phobia

Peter Muris; A. de Jongh; F.J. van Zuuren; G. ter Horst

In this study it was found that dental phobics with a high monitoring coping style (n = 12) indicated themselves as being less able to control cognitions about an upcoming treatment than phobics with a low monitoring coping style (n = 12). In addition, high monitoring phobics neither reported higher levels of state anxiety in anticipation of treatment nor had more negative cognitions about the upcoming treatment. An additional finding was that, compared to low anxious patients, dental phobics exhibited higher monitoring scores, but only on the dentist situation of the Miller Behavioural Style Scale and not on the three other situations of this questionnaire.


Psychology & Health | 1999

Coping with dental treatment correlates of dispositional and domain specific monitoring and blunting

F.J. van Zuuren; A. de Jongh; C. Beeckers; P. Swinkels

Abstract Relations between coping style and several variables on an intermediary level were studied in a group of dentally anxious patients (N = 68) awaiting dental treatment. Monitoring was found to be positively related to the need of information: General dispositional monitoring was the best predictor of the need of information in case of more distant threat, whereas domain specific monitoring was the best predictor in case of imminent threat. Furthermore. dental trait anxiety was strongly related to early anticipatory tension, degree of anticipatory tension at several moments in time, and tension during treatment as perceived by the dentist, thereby overshadowing the weaker effects of coping style. Domain specific blunting was negatively related to desires for informational adaptations in the waiting room, and to question proneness as perceived by the dentist during treatment. It is concluded that, in order to study further effects of coping style, a sample homogeneous with respect to domain specific ...

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A. de Jongh

Academic Center for Dentistry Amsterdam

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G. ter Horst

Academic Center for Dentistry Amsterdam

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F.B. Lammes

University of Amsterdam

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J. Giesbers

VU University Amsterdam

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