Healthcare experiences of people with advanced colorectal cancer: A qualitative study
Loading...
Date
Authors
Lim, Chloe Yi Shing
Laidsaar-Powell, Rebekah
Young, Jane M.
Steffens, Daniel
Ansari, Nabila
Joshy, Grace
Butow, Phyllis
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Churchill Livingstone
Abstract
Purpose
Qualitative research examining healthcare experiences and needs of people with advanced (metastatic or recurrent) colorectal cancer CRC-A is limited. This study aimed to fill this gap in CRC-A survivors treated with surgical or palliative chemotherapy, through a qualitative study.
Method
Australian adults treated for CRC-A were recruited 0.5–2 years post-surgery or post-diagnosis of CRC-A (for palliative chemotherapy groups). Semi-structured telephone interviews, analysed via framework analysis, explored healthcare experiences. Demographic, clinical, and quality of life data characterised the sample and informed framework analyses. Data was compared against the Institute of Medicine's framework for quality healthcare.
Results
Interviews from 38 participants (22 female) of median age 59 years (range 27–84) revealed six overarching themes relating to the safety, effectiveness, timeliness, patient-centredness, efficiency, and equity of CRC-A care: 1) Early experiences influence later perceptions; 2) Trusting the system, trusting the professionals; 3) The benefits of multidisciplinary care co-ordination; 4) Feeling lost in follow-up; 5) Whose role is it anyway? Gaps in responsibility for survivorship care; and 6) Useful or useless? Perceptions of psychosocial support.
Conclusions
Healthcare systems for CRC-A can be improved through delivery of repeated information, upskilling general practitioners and/or implementing written survivorship care plans or survivorship clinics, to ensure quality healthcare.
Description
Citation
Collections
Source
European Journal of Oncology Nursing
Type
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
License Rights
Restricted until
2099-12-31
Downloads
File
Description