| Literature DB >> 31112578 |
Hae Won Kim1, Duck Hee Kim2, Yeon Hee Kim3, Eun Ju Lee1, Saem Yi Kang4, Da Bit Lee4, Youngji Kim5.
Abstract
To determine the degree to which nurses are aware of cervical cancer and to describe nurses' experiences of caring for patients with cervical cancer. To promote quality of nursing care of cervical cancer, we need to explore their perceptions and nursing experience in doing cervical-cancer care. This study was a qualitative descriptive design. Interviews were conducted with 14 registered nurses. The interviews were audiotaped, transcribed and analyzed. Content analysis was performed. Fourteen nurses who had been working at wards and cancer education centers were recruited in this study. Nine key themes emerged from three categories such as nurses' awareness of cervical cancer, awareness of cervical cancer patient and caring experience. Nurses expressed fear of cervical cancer and helplessness in the face of a life-threatening prognosis. Nurses stated that they might have prejudice about cervical cancer, since it is caused by a sexually transmitted disease. They also recalled that patients with cervical cancer were more sensitive and demanding. Our findings provide a comprehensive and in-depth perspective in understanding the experience of caring for cervical cancer patients. Clinical nurses showed complex emotional reactions to cervical cancer, and expressed prejudice against the sex life of cervical-cancer patients. More education is required to ensure that clinical nurses can provide a nurse-led intervention with patients by managing nurses' fear, prejudice, and the care burden.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31112578 PMCID: PMC6529155 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0217201
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Characteristics of the subjects (N = 14).
| Characteristics | Categories | N (%) | Mean ± SD |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age | 30.6 ± 5.2 | ||
| 21–25 | 3 (21.4) | ||
| 26–30 | 4 (28.6) | ||
| 31–35 | 4 (28.6) | ||
| 36–40 | 3 (21.4) | ||
| Marital status | - | ||
| Unmarried | 7 (50.0) | ||
| Married | 7 (50.0) | ||
| Religion | - | ||
| No | 7 (50.0) | ||
| Buddhism | 1 (7.1) | ||
| Christian | 6 (42.9) | ||
| Education level | - | ||
| Bachelor | 12 (85.9) | ||
| Master | 2 (14.3) | ||
| Economic status | - | ||
| Low | - | ||
| Middle | 13 (92.9) | ||
| High | 1 (7.1) | ||
| Have a daughter | - | ||
| No | 12 (85.7) | ||
| Yes | 2 (14.3) | ||
| Previously diagnosed with cervical cancer | - | ||
| No | 14 (100.0) | ||
| Yes | - | ||
| Diagnosis of cervical cancer among family members | - | ||
| No | 14 (100.0) | ||
| Yes | - | ||
| HPV vaccination | - | ||
| No | 5 (35.7) | ||
| Yes | 9 (64.3) |
Awareness of cervical cancer and nurses’ caring experience about their cervical cancer patients.
| Category | Theme |
|---|---|
| Awareness of cervical cancer | Fear of disease itself |
| Helplessness due to a terrible prognosis | |
| Optimistic bias: this is not about me | |
| Nurses’ awareness on patients with cervical cancer | Prejudice of cervical cancer caused by sex |
| Sympathy toward patients | |
| A sensitive, burdened patient | |
| Actual caring experience of nurses during caring cervical cancer patients | Nonspecific care at the hospital ward |
| Trying to exclude prejudice about cervical cancer patients | |
| Invisible husband at the ward or patient side | |
| Ascertaining of awareness about cervical cancer prevention | |
| Recommendation for future nursing care |