| Literature DB >> 27730534 |
Leslie Padrnos1,2, Robert Bennett3, Heidi Kosiorek1,4, Amylou C Dueck1,4, Donald Northfelt1,2, Joseph Mikhael1,2, Raoul Tibes1,2, Nandita Khera1,2, Ruben A Mesa5,6.
Abstract
A cancer diagnosis requires significant information to facilitate health care decision making, understand management options, and health care system navigation. Patient knowledge deficit can decrease quality of life and health care compliance. Surveys were distributed to attendees of the Mayo Clinic "Living with and Surviving Cancer" patient symposium January 2015. Follow-up survey was sent to participants 3 months after the symposium. Surveys included demographic data and patient-reported disease comprehension, symptom burden, desired information, and quality-of-life assessment. Demographics: 113 patients completed the pre-intervention survey. Average age was 64.7 years. Disease types included hematologic (N = 50) and solid malignancies (N = 77). Most patients self-reported adequate baseline understanding of their disease (80 %), screening tests (74 %), and monitoring tools (72 %). Lowest knowledge topics were legal issues (13 %) and pain management (35 %). Pre- and post-analysis: 79 of the initial 113 participants completed both surveys. In the post-symposium setting, durable knowledge impact was noted in disease understanding (pre 80 % vs post 92 %), treatment options (pre 60 % vs post 76 %), nutrition (pre 68 % vs post 84 %), and legal issues (pre 15 % vs post 32 %). Most patients desired increased understanding regarding disease, screening tests, nutrition, and stress and fatigue management. The level of desired information for these topics decreased in the post-symposium setting, statistically significant decrease noted in 4 of 5 topics assessed. Knowledge needs and deficit in cancer care range from disease-specific topics, social stressors, and health care navigation. A cancer patient-centered symposium can improve patient-reported knowledge deficit, with durable responses at 3 months, but patient needs persist.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer education; Cancer survivorship; Cancer symposium; Educational intervention; Patient education; Patient knowledge; Quality of life; Survivorship
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 27730534 PMCID: PMC8148893 DOI: 10.1007/s13187-016-1123-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cancer Educ ISSN: 0885-8195 Impact factor: 2.037