| Literature DB >> 30209602 |
Janneke van Roij1,2, Linda Brom3, Maggy Youssef-El Soud4, Lonneke van de Poll-Franse3,5,6, Natasja J H Raijmakers3.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Cancer threatens the social well-being of patients and their informal caregivers. Social life is even more profoundly affected in advanced diseases, but research on social consequences of advanced cancer is scarce. This study aims to explore social consequences of advanced cancer as experienced by patients and their informal caregivers.Entities:
Keywords: Advanced cancer; Focus groups; Informal caregivers; Palliative oncology; Social consequences; Social well-being
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30209602 PMCID: PMC6394690 DOI: 10.1007/s00520-018-4437-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Support Care Cancer ISSN: 0941-4355 Impact factor: 3.603
Fig. 1Flowchart inclusion process
Sociodemographic characteristics of the participants
| Patients with advanced cancer ( | Informal caregivers ( | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Gender | Male | 9 (50%) | 6 (40%) |
| Age | Mean (range) | 59 years (38–76) | 58 years (40–76) |
| Educationa | Low education | 2 (11%) | 4 (27%) |
| Middle education | 6 (33%) | 8 (53%) | |
| High education | 9 (50%) | 3 (20%) | |
| Missing | 1 (6%) | – | |
| Ethnicity | Dutch | 15 (83%) | 15 (100%) |
| French | 1 (6%) | – | |
| Religious beliefs | None | 3 (17%) | 5 (33%) |
| Protestants Christian, active | 2 (11%) | – | |
| Protestants Christian, not active | 1 (6%) | 1 (7%) | |
| Roman Catholic, active | 3 (17%) | 1 (7%) | |
| Roman Catholic, not active | 9 (50%) | 7 (47%) | |
| Other, atheist | – | 1 (7%) | |
| Primary cancer site in patients | Lung | 8 (44%) | 11 (73%) |
| Colorectal | 6 (33%) | 1 (7%) | |
| Breast | 2 (11%) | 2 (13%) | |
| Esophagus | 1 (6%) | 1 (7%) | |
| Prostate | 1 (6%) | – | |
| Time since patient’s diagnosis | 1 year | 5 (28%) | 6 (40%) |
| 2 years | 6 (33%) | 4 (27%) | |
| ≥ 3 years | 5 (28%) | 3 (20%) | |
| Missing | 2 (11%) | 2 (13%) | |
| Relation with patient | Partner | – | 12 (80%) |
| Daughter | 2 (13%) | ||
| Friend | 1 (7%) |
aLow educational level = no education or primary school (e.g., LBO, VBO, LTS, LHNO, VMBO, MBO1), intermediate educational level = lower general secondary education, vocational training or equivalent (e.g., MAVO, VMBO-t, MBO-kort, MBO, MTS, MEAO, HAVO, VWO), high educational level = pre-university education, high vocational training, university (e.g., Hbo-bachelor, Hbo-master, wo-bachelor, wo-master, doctor)
Social consequences of advanced cancer
| Main theme | Subtheme | Category | Mentioned by |
|---|---|---|---|
| Social engagement | Struggle to proceed as normal | Focus on continuing life prior to cancer | p, c |
| More fun activities | p, c | ||
| Caregiving role | c | ||
| Missing out | Missing out on social events | p, c | |
| Consequences of missing out | p | ||
| Work consequences | p, c | ||
| Value of social activities | Daily social activities | p | |
| Personal social activities | c | ||
| Social identity | Cancer is central | Public possession | p |
| One of them | c | ||
| Social talk | p, c | ||
| Seeking anonymity | c | ||
| Being confronted with assumptions | Appearances | p, c | |
| Treated differently | p, c | ||
| Isolation | p | ||
| Stigma | c | ||
| Instructing social ties | p, c | ||
| Social network | Value of social relations | Meaning in life | p, c |
| Instrumental | p | ||
| Changes in the network | Loss of ties | p, c | |
| New ties | p, c | ||
| Quality existing ties | p, c | ||
| Perceived social support | Decreased support over time | p | |
| Delayed support | c | ||
| Lack of emotional support | p, c | ||
| Positive support | c |
p patients, c informal caregivers