| Literature DB >> 36262430 |
Yanjing Liang1,2, Guihua Hao2, Mei Wu1, Lili Hou1,2.
Abstract
Background: In extant literature, the concept of social isolation has been explored primarily in the context of older adults. However, people with cancer may also experience social isolation, and there is a need for increased clarity regarding this phenomenon in this population. Objective: To conceptualize social isolation in adult cancer care.Entities:
Keywords: cancer; concept analysis; psychological nursing; psychosocial behavior; social isolation
Year: 2022 PMID: 36262430 PMCID: PMC9574202 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2022.973640
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Steps for Rodgers’ evolutionary concept analysis.
| Step | Description | |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Identify a concept and its surrogate terms. | |
| 2 | Determine and select a suitable data collection scope. | |
| 3 | Data collection:
Concept attributes; Contextual basis including temporal, sociocultural, and interdisciplinary variables. | |
| 4 | Data analysis. | |
| 5 | If necessary, provide examples supporting the concept. | |
| 6 | Identify hypotheses and applications for the concept’s future development. | |
Figure 1Flow chart of the study screening process. The studies obtained from each database are as follows: PubMed (n = 16), Web of Science (n = 5), PsycINFO (n = 22), CINAHL (n = 12), China National Knowledge Infrastructure (n = 3), Wanfang Data (n = 2), and the Chinese Biomedical Literature Database (n = 0).
Samples of social isolation definitions applied in studies included in the analysis.
| Author (year) | Definitions of social isolation used in the article |
|---|---|
|
| Physical and emotional social isolation is experienced during special circumstances (COVID-19). |
|
| A social relationship shortfall can be quantified by social network size, diversity, or frequency of contacts. |
|
| People are isolated from interpersonal interaction and relationships. It is considered social isolation if people have limited social contact or communication and limited participation in social activities or meetings with friends. |
|
| Social isolation refers to avoidance behaviors and feelings of isolation while dealing with breast cancer. |
|
| Social isolation refers to an individual’s unsatisfied social desire and failure to interact well with the outside world, accompanied by negative emotions such as loneliness and helplessness and negative behaviors such as apathy and rejection. |
|
| Feelings of being avoided, excluded, detached, disconnected, or not being known to others. |
|
| In traditional sociological terminology, social isolation entails a sense of anomie, which includes feelings of loneliness, inequality with others, and uselessness. |
|
| Social isolation refers to the phenomenon that an individual is automatically isolated from other people and society when they are treated negatively by the world during social interaction, resulting in negative emotions such as loneliness and helplessness, and showing negative behaviors such as avoidance and rejection. |
|
| Social isolation refers to people believing that their relationships are insufficient to meet the quality and quantity of their social needs. |
|
| The term “survivor loneliness” is used to represent the social isolation that may occur after cancer treatment. On an intrapersonal level, survivors described feeling alone as a result of acting inauthentically in relationships, feeling out of control of their bodies after the treatment, and feeling alone in their experience. |
|
| Social isolation refers to an abnormal life with an abnormal social network. |
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| Inability to socialize or maintain existing relationships or develop new ones. |
|
| According to some women, social isolation refers to being in a life stage that is not consistent with the life stages of their peers. |
|
| Protective isolation is used to keep patients away from infections that may negatively affect them. |
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| A person’s level of perceived social isolation (colloquially, loneliness) can be measured objectively based on criteria such as the size of their social network and number/frequency of interactions with others, or subjectively based on how isolated they perceive themselves to be. |
|
| Social interactions provide a means of measuring social isolation objectively. |
|
| Small social networks are considered social isolation. |
|
| Intentionally avoiding social or public appearances or contact. The five components that make up a social network are a spouse or intimate partner, the number of first-degree female relatives (living mother, number of biological daughters, number of full sisters), friendship relationships, religious or social ties, and community involvement. |
|
| Social isolation, which refers to rejecting human contact, is practiced by patients as a way of protecting themselves. |
|
| Social isolation refers to physical and emotional isolation. It may have also been a means of protecting the self, friends, and family members. It is the result of attempting to appear “normal” and concealing one’s true emotions, along with avoidance behaviors. |
|
| Social isolation is the result of other people avoiding cancer survivors, and the survivors isolate themselves from their families and friends because of concerns about appearances and reactions. |
|
| It isolates them from loved ones and from the social world they once enjoyed. |
Overview of the characteristics and attributes of social isolation defined in the studies included in the concept analysis.
| Author (year) | Country | Oncology population | Discipline | Design | Sample | Attributes: behaviors and states of social avoidance | Attributes: negative affective experiences |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| United States | Head and neck cancer | Medicine | Qualitative study | 20 | Restricted social network | Distress |
|
| Japan | Lung cancer | Medicine | Prospective cohort study | 264 | Limitations with social networks (size, diversity, or frequency of contacts) | Feelings of loneliness |
|
| China | Breast cancer | Medicine | Cross-sectional study | 389 | Restricted social network (contact, activity, communication) | |
|
| China | Rectal cancer | Nursing | Qualitative study | 18 | Avoidant behaviors (protection from identifying with any form of cancer) | |
|
| Ghana | Breast cancer | Medicine | Qualitative study | 8 | Restricted social network (contact, activity, communication) | |
|
| China | Lung cancer | Nursing | Cross-sectional study | 288 | Limitations with social networks | Feelings of loneliness |
|
| China | Head and neck cancer | Nursing | Cross-sectional study | 230 | Feelings of loneliness | |
|
| China | Breast cancer | Nursing | Cross-sectional study | 228 | Limitations with social network | Feelings of loneliness |
|
| United States | Prostate cancer | Medical informatics | Retrospective study | 3,138 | Limitations with social networks | Feelings of loneliness |
|
| United States | General cancer | Psychology | Review | Concealing their real selves (including hiding cancer facts and feelings of loneliness) | Feelings of loneliness | |
|
| Netherlands | General cancer | Medicine | Qualitative study | 18 | Abnormal social network | |
|
| Australia | Prostate cancer | Nursing | Qualitative study | 20 | Self-isolating or concealing oneself | Feelings of loneliness |
|
| France | General cancer | Medicine | Qualitative study | 3 | Relinquishing former social roles | Feelings of social exclusion (working environment) |
|
| United Kingdom | Bowel cancer | Nursing | Qualitative study | 16 | Limitations with social networks (inability to maintain old and develop new relationships) | |
|
| United States | General cancer | Medicine | Qualitative study | 3 | Limitations with social network | |
|
| Spain | Breast cancer | Medicine | Mixed cohort studies | 2,235 | Limitations with social networks (size, frequency of contacts) | Distress |
|
| United Kingdom | Gynecological cancer | Psychology | Book | Limitations with social networks | Low self-esteem | |
|
| United Kingdom | Cancer in women | Psychology | Mixed-methods study | 695 | Feelings of being in a life stage that is not consistent with peers’ life stages | |
|
| Italy | Hematologic malignancies | Nursing | Qualitative study | 9 | Protective isolation | Feelings of loneliness |
|
| United States | Breast cancer | Medicine | Review | Limitations with social networks (size, diversity, or frequency of contacts) | Feelings of loneliness | |
|
| Korea | Lung cancer | Nursing | Systemic review | Abnormal social interactions | Feelings of loneliness | |
|
| Australia | Breast cancer | Psychology | Systemic review | Not going out | ||
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| Oakland | Breast cancer | Epidemiology | Cohort studies | 2,264 | Limitations with social networks (size) | |
|
| Korea | Neutropenic cancer | Nursing | Systematic review | Limitations with social networks | Concealing real emotions | |
|
| United Kingdom | Breast cancer | Nursing | Qualitative study | 8 | Avoidant behaviors (protection from identifying with any form of cancer) | Feelings of loneliness |
|
| Netherlands | Head and neck cancer | Public health | Cross-sectional study | 76 | Avoidant behaviors (both active and passive isolation) | |
|
| Israel | General cancer | Psychology | Qualitative study | 40 | Limitations with social networks | |
|
| Denmark | Breast cancer | Medicine | Qualitative study | 39 | Feelings of loneliness | |
|
| United States | Solid tumors | Psychology | Cross-sectional study | 438 | Limitations with social networks (family, friends) | |
|
| United States | Lung cancer | Nursing | Cross-sectional study | 22 | Limitations with social networks (withdrawal from family and friends) | Feelings of loneliness |
Figure 2Model of social isolation concept in adults with cancer.