2016
DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.12770
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Crossing the perspectives of patients, families, and physicians on cancer treatment: A qualitative study

Abstract: PurposePatients, family members, and physicians participate in cancer care, but their perspectives about what is helpful during cancer treatment have rarely been compared. The aim of this study was to compare these three perspectives.MethodsMulticenter qualitative study (with previously published protocol) based on 90 semi-structured interviews. Participants (purposively selected until data saturation) came from three different subsamples: (i) patients with cancer (n=30), (ii) their relatives (n=30), and (iii)… Show more

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Cited by 13 publications
(14 citation statements)
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“…We conducted two studies to explore the lived experience of cancer treatment; one crossed the perspectives of patients ( N = 30), their families ( N = 30), and their oncologist ( N = 10) [ 30 ], while the other one focused on what affects the quality of daily life of patients with cancer ( N = 30) during active treatment [ 110 ]. Our results led to some clinical recommendations to achieve patient-centered cancer treatment, that is, that physicians integrate the dimension of care into the curative treatments performed so that patients to live as well and not simply as long as possible [ 30 ]. To achieve this task, we found an original therapeutic lever that acts like a relational tool for physicians: the support object, defined as an object, a relationship or an activity particularly invested by the patients in their daily lives, which makes them feel good and makes the cancer and its treatment bearable.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…We conducted two studies to explore the lived experience of cancer treatment; one crossed the perspectives of patients ( N = 30), their families ( N = 30), and their oncologist ( N = 10) [ 30 ], while the other one focused on what affects the quality of daily life of patients with cancer ( N = 30) during active treatment [ 110 ]. Our results led to some clinical recommendations to achieve patient-centered cancer treatment, that is, that physicians integrate the dimension of care into the curative treatments performed so that patients to live as well and not simply as long as possible [ 30 ]. To achieve this task, we found an original therapeutic lever that acts like a relational tool for physicians: the support object, defined as an object, a relationship or an activity particularly invested by the patients in their daily lives, which makes them feel good and makes the cancer and its treatment bearable.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Our group, which has worked more than a decade on the analysis, dissemination, and use of qualitative methods in medicine, has developed expertise in their use for exploring complex questions around the experience of diseases and their treatment [ 28 30 ]. We consider that physicians have specific concerns and that their medical training and professional experience enable them to contribute to the field of qualitative medical research differently than nurses and other healthcare professionals do.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This study aimed to explore the experience of patients, caregivers, nurses and physicians on diagnosis and prognosis-related communication with respect to the connected meanings. In the oncological literature, there are not many studies adopting a multi-perspective design, 14 but this kind of design allows for considering the context of relationships in which disease and care are experienced. 26 Moreover, looking at how meanings are attributed and interwoven allows for seeing and comparing the different moral perspectives on diagnosis and prognosis-related communication embraced by the four figures participating in the study.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…13 However, the perspectives of patients, caregivers, physicians and nurses have been seldom studied all together. 14 Dyadic 15 and triadic 16 communicative interactions have been investigated in some previous qualitative studies, but they limit the analysis to a portion of the context of care. Interpretative phenomenological analysis is a qualitative method used in health-related research to understand human experiences that are essential to the participants.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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