Symptom Experience in Patients with Gynecological Cancers: The Development of Symptom Clusters through Patient Narratives
a Research Centre for Nursing and Midwifery Practice, Australian National University, Medical School, Canberra, Australia; School of Health and Social Sciences, Middlesex University, London; School of Nursing, Midwifery and Social Work, University of Manchester, Manchester, United Kingdom
Received 22 February 2010;
accepted 13 December 2011.
Available online 2 April 2011.
Abstract
The vast majority of the increasing cancer literature on physical and psychological symptom clusters is quantitative, attempting either to model clusters through statistical techniques or to test priori clusters for their strength of relationship. Narrative symptom clusters can be particularly sensitive outcomes that can generate conceptually meaningful hypotheses for symptom cluster research. We conducted a study to explore the explanation of patients about the development and coexistence of symptoms and how patients attempted to self-manage them. We collected 12-month qualitative longitudinal data over four assessment points consisting of 39 interview data sets from 10 participants with gynecological cancer. Participants' experiences highlighted the presence of physical and psychological symptom clusters, complicating the patients' symptom experience that often lasted 1 year. While some complementary and self-management approaches were used to manage symptoms, few options and interventions were discussed. The cancer care team may be able to develop strategies for a more thorough patient assessment of symptoms reported as the most bothersome and patient-centered sensitive interventions that encompass the physiological, psychological, sociocultural, and behavioral components of the symptom experience essential for effective symptom management.
Being diagnosed with gynecological cancer is associated with high distress levels, particularly in younger patients and in advanced disease.1 The residual effects of surgery and various treatments are known to have a profound and long-lasting impact on quality-of-life issues with significant and potentially detrimental change to women's self-esteem, mental health, sexual functioning, and fertility.2 Although recent medical advances have increased survival rates, few investigations have been conducted to examine the interplay of physical and psychological symptoms on this group of patients. Moreover, previous studies have focused predominantly on gathering quantitative data such as the frequencies and types of symptoms, with little or no information about the gynecological cancer patients' symptom experiences.[2] and
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