Literature DB >> 11879281

Problem-solving cancer care education for patients and caregivers.

J A Bucher1, M Loscalzo, J Zabora, P S Houts, C Hooker, K BrintzenhofeSzoc.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: A program evaluation was conducted to explore the potential effects of a 90-minute problem-solving education session for persons with advanced cancer and their families. DESCRIPTION OF PROGRAM: Patients with advanced cancer and their families, who were visiting a tertiary-care outpatient setting, were invited to attend a 90-minute individualized educational session that taught basic problem-solving principles using a cognitive-behavioral framework. Pre-education and posteducation data were collected about the confidence of participants in providing care, their feelings about being informed about resources, and their perceptions of their problem-solving ability.
RESULTS: At baseline, most participants reported low confidence about their ability to provide cancer care and felt uninformed about community resources, but they viewed themselves as moderate-to-good problem solvers. Forty-two educational sessions were delivered to 49 caregivers and 40 patients. Two months later, participants reported feeling more informed about community resources and achieved higher posteducation scores for problem-solving ability. More caregivers than patients reported that reading The Home Care Guide for Cancer made a great deal of difference in their approach to home care. CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS: Most educational sessions for families affected by cancer focus on delivering information, not on building skills. These findings suggest that a one-on-one educational session that teaches problem-solving skills can be successfully delivered in a busy clinic setting. Family caregivers are especially likely to benefit from this program.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2001        PMID: 11879281     DOI: 10.1046/j.1523-5394.2001.009002066.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cancer Pract        ISSN: 1065-4704


  22 in total

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