| Literature DB >> 35814608 |
Daniel G Coro1, Amanda D Hutchinson1, Siobhan Banks1, Alison M Coates2.
Abstract
Purpose: Cancer survivors often make long-term dietary changes, and nutrition is important for survivorship outcomes. Many survivors experience persisting cognitive difficulties, which can impact health behaviors. This study aimed to identify perceived drivers of eating habit changes, and the barriers to making intentional dietary changes, among breast cancer survivors with persisting self-reported cancer-related cognitive impairment. Materials andEntities:
Keywords: barriers; cancer survivors; cognition; diet; nutrition; qualitative
Year: 2022 PMID: 35814608 PMCID: PMC9258797 DOI: 10.1089/whr.2021.0133
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Womens Health Rep (New Rochelle) ISSN: 2688-4844
FIG. 1.Consort diagram of recruitment and participation.
Demographic and Treatment Characteristics of Participants
| Demographic details | Total sample ( |
|---|---|
| Mean age in years, (SD) (range) | 51.5 (10.4) (27–69) |
| Sex, | |
| Female | 13 (100) |
| Ethnicity, | |
| White | 13 (100) |
| Marital status, | |
| Single | 2 (15) |
| Married or de facto relationship | 11 (85) |
| Highest educational status, | |
| Primary school | 1 (8) |
| Secondary school | 2 (15) |
| Graduate/undergraduate degree | 7 (54) |
| Postgraduate degree | 3 (23) |
| Current employment, | |
| Not employed | 1 (8) |
| Part-time | 6 (46) |
| Full-time | 4 (31) |
| Retired | 2 (15) |
| Treatment history, | |
| Surgery | 12 (92) |
| Radiotherapy | 10 (77) |
| Chemotherapy | 11 (85) |
| Treatment characteristics | |
| Diagnosis | 23.6 (15.3) [7–52] |
| Surgery | 24.0 (15.7) [9–52] |
| Radiotherapy | 19.0 (16.2) [1–45] |
| Chemotherapy | 12.6 (12.7) [3–46] |
| Completing any primary treatment | 14.7 (15.3) [1–45] |
Changes in Eating Habits: A Summary of Themes and Related Quotes
| Theme [no. of participants mentioned] | Example participant quote (participant no.) |
|---|---|
| “I eat when I feel like it” (meal timing shifts) (7/13) | “Yeah, changed the way we eat a bit… [we now have] a bigger meal at lunchtime and go do things and a smaller meal at night…far more likely to have a lighter more protein meal at night…” (P09) |
| “Swap out the meat” (more plant-based eating) (7/13) | “…more vegetable based now… I sort of like make some vegetable patties, that I might have with salad, instead of a piece of chicken with salad for example.” (P03) |
| “Throwing meals together” (less variety, greater convenience) (5/13) | “It's reaching for whatever I can do quickly…often running short of things, because I haven't thought [about what to cook] …it's in the too hard basket.” (P01) |
Perceived Drivers of Eating Habit Changes: A Summary of Themes and Related Quotes
| Theme (no. of participants mentioned) | Example participant quote (participant no.) |
|---|---|
| “I wish I could taste something” (persisting treatment-related changes) (10/13) | “I have no taste as a result of chemo and so that makes things quite difficult to find something which is appealing. So, I couldn't actually care whether I ate pumpkin soup for dinner ten nights in a row…And that is a huge part of the changes in my life.” (P09) |
| “Teamwork” (help and support from others) (7/13) | “I struggle with it when I'm by myself at home. If my husband's here, it's a different story because we egg each other into making sure that we eat healthily” (P14) |
| “I got used to not eating” (old treatment habits) (5/13) | “And I ‘spose from not being very well having the chemo and everything, I've just got used to not eating. ‘Cause then I couldn't keep some foods down and things like that, so…I've sort of changed…[I'm] not that hungry and not that motivated…” (P02) |
| “Looking after myself” (preventative health and self-care) (5/13) | “…as a cancer survivor, you need to really focus on your wellbeing… how your body you get energy from your food…I like to buy good quality food…fresh things like that…Having cancer almost gives you permission to say, well, to look after yourself.” (P13) |
| “Not working 9 to 5” (changes to work schedule) (5/13) | “…most of what I cook is from scratch, and has mostly always been the case, but it's more the case now, and again because I have the time with not, you know, having to fit everything around work.” (P03) |
Perceived Barriers to Intentional Dietary Changes: A Summary of Themes and Related Quotes
| Theme [no. of participants mentioned] | Example participant quote (participant no.) |
|---|---|
| “Whatever's quick and easy” (too much time and effort) (8/13) | “…just the last few days I've got my [cook]books out again…I couldn't…found it difficult to plan things at that level. Yes, I could walk to the shop and go and grab a few things, but if I had to sit down and really plan it, it was too much…” (P13) |
| “Life's too short, eat the donut” (food cravings and enjoyment) (8/13) | “I'm a food scientist…so I knew the impact of foods and what I needed to eat…Post-[radiation], I'd found an absurd drive for sweet foods… it was manic… looking for any form of sugar that I could find… if it was there, I'd eat it…” (P12) |
| “Out of ideas” (lacking dietary resources) (4/13) | “I would love if they had some sort of place you could go to that said… “we're going to do a cooking class today and this is going to focus on good food, fresh food, easy to get on the table, and it's not going to cost you $500 to do the session.” That'd be great! Walk away with 4 or 5 different recipes that didn't have weird ingredients.” (P1) |