Coping well with advanced cancer: a serial qualitative interview study with patients and family carers
Coping well with advanced cancer: a serial qualitative interview study with patients and family carers
Objectives
To understand successful strategies used by people to cope well when living with advanced cancer; to explore how professionals can support effective coping strategies; to understand how to support development of effective coping strategies for patients and family carers.
Design
Qualitative serial (4-12 week intervals) interview study with people with advanced cancer and their informal carers followed by focus groups. The iterative design had a novel focus on positive coping strategies. Interview analysis focused on patients and carers as individuals and pairs, exploring multiple dimensions of their coping experiences. Focus group analysis explored strategies for intervention development.
Participants
26 people with advanced (stage 3-4) breast, prostate, lung or colorectal cancer, or in receipt of palliative care, and 24 paired nominated informal/family carers.
Setting
Participants recruited through outpatient clinics at two tertiary cancer centres in Merseyside and Manchester, UK, between June 2012 and July 2013.
Results
45 patient and 41 carer interviews were conducted plus 4 focus groups (16 participants). People with advanced cancer and their informal/family carers develop coping strategies which enable effective management of psychological wellbeing. People draw from pre-diagnosis coping strategies, but these develop through responding to the experience of living with advanced cancer. Strategies include being realistic, indulgence, support, and learning from others, which enabled participants to regain a sense of wellbeing after emotional challenge. Learning from peers emerged as particularly important in promoting psychological wellbeing through the development of effective ‘everyday’, non-clinical coping strategies.
Conclusions
Our findings challenge current models of providing psychological support for those with advanced cancer which focus on professional intervention. It is important to recognise, enable and support peoples’ own resources and coping strategies. Peer support may have potential, and could be a patient-centred, cost effective way of managing the needs of a growing population of those living with advanced cancer.
Walshe, Catherine
2917881f-9a21-4b0d-9453-b112c0041e35
Roberts, Diane
69d9278a-f158-4870-903a-970977b40b7c
Appleton, Lynda
971b9244-aa8e-4d81-9f95-18ed4fe755f5
Calman, Lynn
9ae254eb-74a7-4906-9eb4-62ad99f058c1
Large, Paul
9c9a7349-d018-467e-9f4f-bf240a02e8f5
Lloyd-Williams, Mari
182f159c-6f18-4a9b-aa05-f52e25c692c1
Grande, Gunn
7335911a-ee7f-44cd-924e-c8b3c903fe6c
January 2017
Walshe, Catherine
2917881f-9a21-4b0d-9453-b112c0041e35
Roberts, Diane
69d9278a-f158-4870-903a-970977b40b7c
Appleton, Lynda
971b9244-aa8e-4d81-9f95-18ed4fe755f5
Calman, Lynn
9ae254eb-74a7-4906-9eb4-62ad99f058c1
Large, Paul
9c9a7349-d018-467e-9f4f-bf240a02e8f5
Lloyd-Williams, Mari
182f159c-6f18-4a9b-aa05-f52e25c692c1
Grande, Gunn
7335911a-ee7f-44cd-924e-c8b3c903fe6c
Walshe, Catherine, Roberts, Diane, Appleton, Lynda, Calman, Lynn, Large, Paul, Lloyd-Williams, Mari and Grande, Gunn
(2017)
Coping well with advanced cancer: a serial qualitative interview study with patients and family carers.
PLoS ONE, 12 (1), [e0169071].
(doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0169071).
Abstract
Objectives
To understand successful strategies used by people to cope well when living with advanced cancer; to explore how professionals can support effective coping strategies; to understand how to support development of effective coping strategies for patients and family carers.
Design
Qualitative serial (4-12 week intervals) interview study with people with advanced cancer and their informal carers followed by focus groups. The iterative design had a novel focus on positive coping strategies. Interview analysis focused on patients and carers as individuals and pairs, exploring multiple dimensions of their coping experiences. Focus group analysis explored strategies for intervention development.
Participants
26 people with advanced (stage 3-4) breast, prostate, lung or colorectal cancer, or in receipt of palliative care, and 24 paired nominated informal/family carers.
Setting
Participants recruited through outpatient clinics at two tertiary cancer centres in Merseyside and Manchester, UK, between June 2012 and July 2013.
Results
45 patient and 41 carer interviews were conducted plus 4 focus groups (16 participants). People with advanced cancer and their informal/family carers develop coping strategies which enable effective management of psychological wellbeing. People draw from pre-diagnosis coping strategies, but these develop through responding to the experience of living with advanced cancer. Strategies include being realistic, indulgence, support, and learning from others, which enabled participants to regain a sense of wellbeing after emotional challenge. Learning from peers emerged as particularly important in promoting psychological wellbeing through the development of effective ‘everyday’, non-clinical coping strategies.
Conclusions
Our findings challenge current models of providing psychological support for those with advanced cancer which focus on professional intervention. It is important to recognise, enable and support peoples’ own resources and coping strategies. Peer support may have potential, and could be a patient-centred, cost effective way of managing the needs of a growing population of those living with advanced cancer.
Text
Coping well with advanced cancer A serial qualitative interview study.docx
- Accepted Manuscript
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 22 December 2016
e-pub ahead of print date: 20 January 2017
Published date: January 2017
Organisations:
Faculty of Health Sciences
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 404708
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/404708
ISSN: 1932-6203
PURE UUID: 8ae9312d-a1e4-491c-baea-d07acc6daaf5
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 17 Jan 2017 17:18
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 04:09
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Contributors
Author:
Catherine Walshe
Author:
Diane Roberts
Author:
Lynda Appleton
Author:
Paul Large
Author:
Mari Lloyd-Williams
Author:
Gunn Grande
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