Student, Faculty Publish Article On Gastric Cancer Patients

Student, Faculty Publish Article On Gastric Cancer Patients

chip baileysharron dochertyyufen linYufen Lin, PhD student, Sharron Docherty, PhD in Nursing program assistant dean, and Chip Bailey, associate professor, published an article entitled "Symptom Experience and Self-management for Multiple Co-occurring Symptoms in Patients with Gastric Cancer: A Qualitative Study" in European Journal of Oncology Nursing. Co-authors include Laura Porter, professor, School of Medicine.

Abstract

Purpose: Patients with gastric cancer experience an increased symptom burden with multiple co-occurring symptoms. Knowledge of patients’ symptom experiences and self-management for these symptoms is limited. The purpose of this study was to describe multiple co-occurring symptoms, symptom experiences, and symptom self-management strategies in patients with gastric cancer.

Methods: A qualitative descriptive approach was used for this study. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with ten American participants (median age 52.5 years, 50% female, 70% African American). Content analysis was used to explore their symptoms, experiences, and self-management strategies.

Results: Four themes were identified: perceptions of multiple co-occurring symptoms, complex and dynamic nature of symptom experiences, living with multiple co-occurring symptoms, and symptom self-management strategies (i.e., medications for symptoms, information seeking from the clinician team, lifestyle modification, psychosocial and spiritual support).

Conclusions: Our findings provide new insights into how patients with gastric cancer perceive and interpret their multiple co-occurring symptoms, contribute to our understanding of the role that inter-individual variability might play in symptom experiences, and highlight a range of self-management strategies for managing multiple co-occurring symptoms. Oncology nurses need to assess symptoms on an ongoing basis, educate patients about multiple co-occurring symptoms, and develop and test person-centered self-management interventions for these patients to enhance their symptom relief and quality of life.

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