Planning and developing a web-based intervention for active surveillance in prostate cancer: an integrated self-care programme for managing psychological distress
Planning and developing a web-based intervention for active surveillance in prostate cancer: an integrated self-care programme for managing psychological distress
Objectives: to outline the planning, development and optimisation of a psycho-educational behavioural intervention for patients on active surveillance for prostate cancer. The intervention aimed to support men manage active surveillance-related psychological distress.
Methods: the person-based approach (PBA) was used as the overarching guiding methodological framework for intervention development. Evidence-based methods were incorporated to improve robustness. The process commenced with data gathering activities comprising the following four components: • A systematic review and meta-analysis of depression and anxiety in prostate cancer • A cross-sectional survey on depression and anxiety in active surveillance • A review of existing interventions in the field • A qualitative study with the target audience The purpose of this paper is to bring these components together and describe how they facilitated the establishment of key guiding principles and a logic model, which underpinned the first draft of the intervention.
Results: the prototype intervention, named PROACTIVE, consists of six Internet-based sessions run concurrently with three group support sessions. The sessions cover the following topics: lifestyle (diet and exercise), relaxation and resilience techniques, talking to friends and family, thoughts and feelings, daily life (money and work) and information about prostate cancer and active surveillance. The resulting intervention has been trialled in a feasibility study, the results of which are published elsewhere.
Conclusions: the planning and development process is key to successful delivery of an appropriate, accessible and acceptable intervention. The PBA strengthened the intervention by drawing on target-user experiences to maximise acceptability and user engagement. This meticulous description in a clinical setting using this rigorous but flexible method is a useful demonstration for others developing similar interventions. TRIAL REGISTRATION AND ETHICAL APPROVAL: ISRCTN registered: ISRCTN38893965 . NRES Committee South Central - Oxford A. REC reference: 11/SC/0355.
Hughes, Stephanie
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Kassianos, Angelos P.
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Everitt, Hazel
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Stuart, Beth
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Band, Rebecca
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Hughes, Stephanie
a6d39500-67ff-4d7a-a1dc-8e42f80945ff
Kassianos, Angelos P.
84525e15-4e1e-4cd1-8932-1ea889765092
Everitt, Hazel
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Stuart, Beth
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Band, Rebecca
be8901bb-bb1b-4131-8e19-c1d4a3bdfb8d
Hughes, Stephanie, Kassianos, Angelos P., Everitt, Hazel, Stuart, Beth and Band, Rebecca
(2022)
Planning and developing a web-based intervention for active surveillance in prostate cancer: an integrated self-care programme for managing psychological distress.
Pilot and Feasibility Studies, 8, [175].
(doi:10.1186/s40814-022-01124-x).
Abstract
Objectives: to outline the planning, development and optimisation of a psycho-educational behavioural intervention for patients on active surveillance for prostate cancer. The intervention aimed to support men manage active surveillance-related psychological distress.
Methods: the person-based approach (PBA) was used as the overarching guiding methodological framework for intervention development. Evidence-based methods were incorporated to improve robustness. The process commenced with data gathering activities comprising the following four components: • A systematic review and meta-analysis of depression and anxiety in prostate cancer • A cross-sectional survey on depression and anxiety in active surveillance • A review of existing interventions in the field • A qualitative study with the target audience The purpose of this paper is to bring these components together and describe how they facilitated the establishment of key guiding principles and a logic model, which underpinned the first draft of the intervention.
Results: the prototype intervention, named PROACTIVE, consists of six Internet-based sessions run concurrently with three group support sessions. The sessions cover the following topics: lifestyle (diet and exercise), relaxation and resilience techniques, talking to friends and family, thoughts and feelings, daily life (money and work) and information about prostate cancer and active surveillance. The resulting intervention has been trialled in a feasibility study, the results of which are published elsewhere.
Conclusions: the planning and development process is key to successful delivery of an appropriate, accessible and acceptable intervention. The PBA strengthened the intervention by drawing on target-user experiences to maximise acceptability and user engagement. This meticulous description in a clinical setting using this rigorous but flexible method is a useful demonstration for others developing similar interventions. TRIAL REGISTRATION AND ETHICAL APPROVAL: ISRCTN registered: ISRCTN38893965 . NRES Committee South Central - Oxford A. REC reference: 11/SC/0355.
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s40814-022-01124-x
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Accepted/In Press date: 15 July 2022
e-pub ahead of print date: 9 August 2022
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 478377
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/478377
ISSN: 2055-5784
PURE UUID: 80ba98cc-8740-4477-b7fd-ee1f64db0db9
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Date deposited: 29 Jun 2023 16:48
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:35
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Author:
Angelos P. Kassianos
Author:
Beth Stuart
Author:
Rebecca Band
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