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Surviving cancer treatment: An investigation of the experience of fear about, and monitoring for, recurrence in patients following treatment for colorectal cancer

Surviving cancer treatment: An investigation of the experience of fear about, and monitoring for, recurrence in patients following treatment for colorectal cancer
Surviving cancer treatment: An investigation of the experience of fear about, and monitoring for, recurrence in patients following treatment for colorectal cancer
Background
It is known that many individuals worry about their cancer recurring after colorectal cancer treatment but the significance and specific manifestations of this problem require exploration.

Purpose
This paper reports upon the research findings of a qualitative study to explain how fears of recurrence can affect individuals recovering from curative colorectal cancer surgery.

Methods
A longitudinal, grounded theory study was conducted. Sixteen participants who had received curative treatment for colorectal cancer were interviewed on up to four occasions during the 12 months following their surgery, 62 interviews were conducted in total.

Results
Many participants expressed anxiety about if and when their cancer might return, despite the knowledge that they had had successful treatment for early-stage colorectal cancer. This fear led some to adopt new behaviours in a desire to achieve a more dependable and controllable body. Heightened monitoring and management of the body characterised a state of ‘guarding’ – a concept developed from the data. By contrast, other participants did not perceive the risk of cancer recurrence to be as personally threatening or were able to assume strategies to manage any such concerns and find a sense of resolution to their recovery.

Conclusion
The nature of an individual’s response to fears of recurrence and consequent impact on their recovery warrants greater clinical consideration. Providing opportunities to openly discuss the possibility of cancer recurrence, assessing individual fears and offering suggestions on possible coping strategies to lessen the associated distress, are essential supportive activities enabling transition to life beyond cancer.

colorectal cancer, fear of recurrence, body, guarding, survivorship
1462-3889
243-249
Taylor, Claire
f4944f32-fb4a-4178-9be2-205b3b1433e8
Richardson, Alison
3db30680-aa47-43a5-b54d-62d10ece17b7
Cowley, Sarah
95854d1b-abe4-4865-a15e-4056f050b1ae
Taylor, Claire
f4944f32-fb4a-4178-9be2-205b3b1433e8
Richardson, Alison
3db30680-aa47-43a5-b54d-62d10ece17b7
Cowley, Sarah
95854d1b-abe4-4865-a15e-4056f050b1ae

Taylor, Claire, Richardson, Alison and Cowley, Sarah (2011) Surviving cancer treatment: An investigation of the experience of fear about, and monitoring for, recurrence in patients following treatment for colorectal cancer. European Journal of Oncology Nursing, 15 (3), 243-249. (doi:10.1016/j.ejon.2011.03.010). (PMID:21530395)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background
It is known that many individuals worry about their cancer recurring after colorectal cancer treatment but the significance and specific manifestations of this problem require exploration.

Purpose
This paper reports upon the research findings of a qualitative study to explain how fears of recurrence can affect individuals recovering from curative colorectal cancer surgery.

Methods
A longitudinal, grounded theory study was conducted. Sixteen participants who had received curative treatment for colorectal cancer were interviewed on up to four occasions during the 12 months following their surgery, 62 interviews were conducted in total.

Results
Many participants expressed anxiety about if and when their cancer might return, despite the knowledge that they had had successful treatment for early-stage colorectal cancer. This fear led some to adopt new behaviours in a desire to achieve a more dependable and controllable body. Heightened monitoring and management of the body characterised a state of ‘guarding’ – a concept developed from the data. By contrast, other participants did not perceive the risk of cancer recurrence to be as personally threatening or were able to assume strategies to manage any such concerns and find a sense of resolution to their recovery.

Conclusion
The nature of an individual’s response to fears of recurrence and consequent impact on their recovery warrants greater clinical consideration. Providing opportunities to openly discuss the possibility of cancer recurrence, assessing individual fears and offering suggestions on possible coping strategies to lessen the associated distress, are essential supportive activities enabling transition to life beyond cancer.

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More information

Published date: 2011
Keywords: colorectal cancer, fear of recurrence, body, guarding, survivorship

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 186645
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/186645
ISSN: 1462-3889
PURE UUID: 536c1377-c2b1-4701-b752-2b4439e2135c
ORCID for Alison Richardson: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3127-5755

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Date deposited: 13 May 2011 15:12
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:34

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Contributors

Author: Claire Taylor
Author: Sarah Cowley

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