Investigator

Rona Moss-Morris

King's College London

About

RMRona Moss-Morris
Papers(1)
Emotional response to…
Collaborators(5)
Zeev RosbergerEmily McBrideJo WallerLaura MarlowOvidiu Tatar
Institutions(5)
Kings College LondonMcGill UniversityUniversity College Lo…King's College LondonDouglas Hospital Rese…

Papers

Emotional response to testing positive for human papillomavirus at cervical cancer screening: a mixed method systematic review with meta-analysis

Tens-of-millions of women every year test positive for human papillomavirus (HPV) at routine cervical screening. We performed a mixed-methods systematic review using a results-based convergent design to provide the first comprehensive overview of emotional response to testing positive for HPV (HPV+). We mapped our findings using the cognitive behavioural framework. Six electronic databases were searched from inception to 09-Nov-2019 and 33 papers were included. Random-effects meta-analyses revealed that HPV+ women with abnormal or normal cytology displayed higher short-term anxiety than those with normal results (MD on State-Trait Anxiety Inventory = 7.6, 95% CI: 4.59-10.60 and MD = 6.33, CI: 1.31-11.35, respectively); there were no long-term differences. Psychological distress (general/sexual/test-specific) was higher in HPV+ women with abnormal cytology in the short-term and long-term (SMD = 0.68, CI: 0.32-1.03 and SMD = 0.42, CI: 0.05-0.80, respectively). Testing HPV+ was also related to disgust/shame, surprise and fear about cancer. Broadly, adverse response related to eight cognitive constructs (low control, confusion, cancer-related concerns, relationship concerns, sexual concerns, uncertainty, stigma, low trust) and six behavioural constructs (relationship problems, social impact, non-disclosure of results, idiosyncratic prevention, indirect clinical interaction, changes to sexual practice). Almost exclusive use of observational and qualitative designs limited inferences of causality and conclusions regarding clinical significance.

332Works
1Papers
5Collaborators
Inflammatory Bowel DiseasesBreast NeoplasmsChronic DiseaseIrritable Bowel SyndromeNeoplasm Recurrence, LocalMultiple SclerosisCancer SurvivorsGastrointestinal Diseases

Positions

Researcher

King's College London

2011–

Professor of Psychology as Applied to Medicine / Head of Department

King's College London · Psychology

2007–

Professor of Health Psychology

University of Southampton · Psychology

2005–

Reader of Health Psychology

University of Southampton · Psychology

2001–

Senior lecturer/Senior lecturer above the bar

University of Auckland · Psychological Medicine

1998–

Lecturer

University of Auckland · Health Psychology

Education

1998

PhD

University of Auckland · Psychological Medicine

1984

BSc Occupational Therapy with Distinction

University of Cape Town · Occupational Therapy