Facilitating patients' coping with fatigue during chemotherapy: pilot outcomes
Facilitating patients' coping with fatigue during chemotherapy: pilot outcomes
A pilot study was conducted to develop and test a nursing intervention to facilitate the management of fatigue in patients receiving chemotherapy. The intervention, named the Beating Fatigue program, has 4 elements: assessment/monitoring, education, coaching in the management of fatigue, and provision of emotional support. Beating Fatigue was implemented with and evaluated by 8 patients. Overall, patients were very positive about the program and perceived the opportunity to talk to someone about fatigue as the most beneficial strategy within the program, although individual patients varied in which aspect they most preferred. Data from the pilot work supported the view that a multifaceted approach to the management of cancer-related fatigue is appropriate because it enables an intervention package to be tailored to an individual's requirements. The approach appeared both feasible and practical. Although numeric data were limited, there was some evidence that the approach had the capacity to lessen fatigue and enhance emotional well-being.
300-308
Ream, E.
8f79582d-e1c0-4cc9-ae71-14b543567d63
Richardson, A.
a5adbf25-d0c1-4169-9a96-6186d1bbef5a
Alexander-Dann, C.
1c7c50c1-cc6d-4f99-a31e-f708e5f880af
2002
Ream, E.
8f79582d-e1c0-4cc9-ae71-14b543567d63
Richardson, A.
a5adbf25-d0c1-4169-9a96-6186d1bbef5a
Alexander-Dann, C.
1c7c50c1-cc6d-4f99-a31e-f708e5f880af
Ream, E., Richardson, A. and Alexander-Dann, C.
(2002)
Facilitating patients' coping with fatigue during chemotherapy: pilot outcomes.
Cancer Nursing, 25 (4), .
Abstract
A pilot study was conducted to develop and test a nursing intervention to facilitate the management of fatigue in patients receiving chemotherapy. The intervention, named the Beating Fatigue program, has 4 elements: assessment/monitoring, education, coaching in the management of fatigue, and provision of emotional support. Beating Fatigue was implemented with and evaluated by 8 patients. Overall, patients were very positive about the program and perceived the opportunity to talk to someone about fatigue as the most beneficial strategy within the program, although individual patients varied in which aspect they most preferred. Data from the pilot work supported the view that a multifaceted approach to the management of cancer-related fatigue is appropriate because it enables an intervention package to be tailored to an individual's requirements. The approach appeared both feasible and practical. Although numeric data were limited, there was some evidence that the approach had the capacity to lessen fatigue and enhance emotional well-being.
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Published date: 2002
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Local EPrints ID: 69099
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/69099
ISSN: 0162-220X
PURE UUID: e54faa20-9556-4ca4-9f10-cc1bfd8f363a
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Date deposited: 02 Dec 2009
Last modified: 22 Jul 2022 17:04
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Author:
E. Ream
Author:
A. Richardson
Author:
C. Alexander-Dann
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