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Men Leave:
Separation and Divorce far more common when
the Wife is the Patient
Newswise — A woman is six times more likely
to be separated or divorced soon after a
diagnosis of cancer or multiple sclerosis
than if a man in the relationship is the
patient, according to a study that examined
the role gender played in so-called “partner
abandonment.”
The study also found that the longer the
marriage the more likely it would remain
intact.
The study confirmed earlier research that
put the overall divorce or separation rate
among cancer patients at 11.6 percent,
similar to the population as a whole.
However, researchers were surprised by the
difference in separation and divorce rates
by gender.
The rate when the woman was the patient was
20.8 percent compared to 2.9 percent when
the man was the patient.
“Female gender was the strongest predictor
of separation or divorce in each of the
patient groups we studied,” said Marc
Chamberlain, M.D., a co-corresponding author
and director of the neuro-oncology program
at the Seattle Cancer Care Alliance (SCCA).
Chamberlain is also a professor of neurology
and neurosurgery at the University of
Washington School of Medicine.
The study, “Gender Disparity in the Rate of
Partner Abandonment in Patients with Serious
Medical Illness,” was published in the Nov.
15 issue of the journal Cancer. The other
corresponding author is Michael Glanz, M.D.,
of the Huntsman Cancer Institute at the
University of Utah School of Medicine.
Why men leave a sick spouse can be partly
explained by their lack of ability, compared
to women, to make more rapid commitments to
being caregivers to a sick partner and
women’s better ability to assume the burdens
of maintaining a home and family, the study
authors said.
Researchers at three medical centers -- the
SCCA, Huntsman and Stanford University
School of Medicine -- enrolled a total of
515 patients in 2001 and 2002 and followed
them until February 2006.
The men and women were in three diagnostic
groups: those with a malignant primary brain
tumor (214 patients), those with a solid
tumor with no central nervous system
involvement (193 patients) and those with
multiple sclerosis (108 patients). Almost
half of the patients were women.
Chamberlain said the study was initiated
because doctors noticed that in their neuro-oncology
practices, divorce occurred almost
exclusively when the wife was the patient.
The researchers enrolled groups of patients
with other cancers and with multiple
sclerosis to separate the impact of
oncologic versus neurological disease. The
results showed a stronger gender disparity
for divorce when the wife was the patient in
the general oncology and multiple sclerosis
groups (93 percent and 96 percent
respectively, compared to 78 percent for the
primary brain tumor group).
The study also found correlations between
age and length of marriage and the
likelihood of divorce or separation.
The older the woman was the more likely her
partnership would end. However, longer
marriages remained more stable.
Researchers also measured some health and
quality of life outcomes among the patients
who separated or divorced.
They found that patients used more
antidepressants, participated less in
clinical trials, had more frequent
hospitalizations, were less likely to
complete radiation therapy and more likely
not to die at home, according to the study.
“We believe that our findings apply
generally to patients with life-altering
medical illness,” the authors wrote. “We
recommend that medical providers be
especially sensitive to early suggestions of
marital discord in couples affected by the
occurrence of a serious medical illness,
especially when the woman is the affected
spouse and it occurs early in the marriage.
Early identification and psychosocial
intervention might reduce the frequency of
divorce and separation, and in turn improve
quality of life and quality of care.”
About Seattle
Cancer Care Alliance
Seattle Cancer Care Alliance, established in
1998, unites the adult and pediatric
cancer-care services of Fred Hutchinson
Cancer Research Center, UW Medicine and
Children’s Hospital and Regional Medical
Center.
A major focus of SCCA is to speed the
transfer of new diagnostic and treatment
techniques from the research setting to the
patient bedside while providing premier,
patient-focused cancer care.
Patients who come to SCCA receive the latest
research-based cancer therapies as well as
cutting-edge treatments for a number of
non-malignant diseases under development by
its partner organizations.
SCCA has three clinical-care sites: an
outpatient clinic on the Fred Hutchinson
campus, a pediatric-inpatient unit at
Children’s and an adult-inpatient unit at UW
Medical Center. For more information about
SCCA, visit
www.seattlecca.org.
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