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Understanding factors which affect an older person’s capacity to complete the workload associated with living with cancer

Understanding factors which affect an older person’s capacity to complete the workload associated with living with cancer
Understanding factors which affect an older person’s capacity to complete the workload associated with living with cancer
Background: Many older people who are living with cancer do so with concurrent complex health and social issues. Assessment and treatment planning for cancer often focus primarily on the disease, missing opportunities to identify and address these significant wider concerns.

Aim: To gain an understanding of the factors that can increase or reduce older people’s capacity to manage the workload associated with the self-management of cancer and other conditions.

Method: Secondary analysis of questionnaire data comprising 224 responses to 19 structured items covering health and daily living issues and analysis of free-text responses, focusing on factors affecting an individual’s capacity to manage their workload associated with living with cancer.

Results: Reduced physical function affected many respondents’ capacity to manage their health and other responsibilities and to live their everyday lives. Many respondents were concerned about continuing to care for those dependent on them and identified factors that enhanced their capacity in their social network and from healthcare professionals. Organisational factors such as scheduled appointments, transport and availability of parking further affected respondents’ capacity.

Conclusion: There is an implicit need to identify and address the main factors that can increase an individual’s capacity to manage their health and to support the delivery of person-centred cancer treatment and care plans.
1475-4266
Lewis, Lucy Anne
33184803-a026-451d-a74d-fd10a49a6603
Farrington, Naomi
ba8e905c-862b-4609-b0cc-9e27218de542
Patel, H
ae017fb3-d625-4fdc-a0f9-8a4f4de2b692
Harari, D
d0189db6-90c1-4d56-83f0-2259fbfeb953
Kaisi, T
a9ed376a-c13c-4044-a4a9-4f4a74906c3c
Bridges, Jackie
57e80ebe-ee5f-4219-9bbc-43215e8363cd
Lewis, Lucy Anne
33184803-a026-451d-a74d-fd10a49a6603
Farrington, Naomi
ba8e905c-862b-4609-b0cc-9e27218de542
Patel, H
ae017fb3-d625-4fdc-a0f9-8a4f4de2b692
Harari, D
d0189db6-90c1-4d56-83f0-2259fbfeb953
Kaisi, T
a9ed376a-c13c-4044-a4a9-4f4a74906c3c
Bridges, Jackie
57e80ebe-ee5f-4219-9bbc-43215e8363cd

Lewis, Lucy Anne, Farrington, Naomi, Patel, H, Harari, D, Kaisi, T and Bridges, Jackie (2022) Understanding factors which affect an older person’s capacity to complete the workload associated with living with cancer. Cancer Nursing Practice. (doi:10.7748/cnp.2022.e1813).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: Many older people who are living with cancer do so with concurrent complex health and social issues. Assessment and treatment planning for cancer often focus primarily on the disease, missing opportunities to identify and address these significant wider concerns.

Aim: To gain an understanding of the factors that can increase or reduce older people’s capacity to manage the workload associated with the self-management of cancer and other conditions.

Method: Secondary analysis of questionnaire data comprising 224 responses to 19 structured items covering health and daily living issues and analysis of free-text responses, focusing on factors affecting an individual’s capacity to manage their workload associated with living with cancer.

Results: Reduced physical function affected many respondents’ capacity to manage their health and other responsibilities and to live their everyday lives. Many respondents were concerned about continuing to care for those dependent on them and identified factors that enhanced their capacity in their social network and from healthcare professionals. Organisational factors such as scheduled appointments, transport and availability of parking further affected respondents’ capacity.

Conclusion: There is an implicit need to identify and address the main factors that can increase an individual’s capacity to manage their health and to support the delivery of person-centred cancer treatment and care plans.

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Accepted/In Press date: 23 May 2022
e-pub ahead of print date: 19 July 2022

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 473196
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/473196
ISSN: 1475-4266
PURE UUID: 1b8eb2c4-698e-4fb9-9dbc-a1b639ccc0f2
ORCID for Jackie Bridges: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-6776-736X

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Date deposited: 11 Jan 2023 18:06
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 07:36

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Contributors

Author: Lucy Anne Lewis
Author: H Patel
Author: D Harari
Author: T Kaisi
Author: Jackie Bridges ORCID iD

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