2017
DOI: 10.1186/s12913-017-2110-x
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Reflection of illness and strategies for handling advanced lung cancer – a qualitative analysis in patients and their relatives

Abstract: BackgroundLung cancer patients are often diagnosed in an advanced stage of disease. In a situation of palliative treatment, both patients and their relatives experience existential burden. Evidence suggests that multi-professional teams should deal with them as dyads. However, little is known about differences in their individual situation. The purpose of this study is to explore and compare reflections that arise out of the context of diagnosis and to compare how patients and their relatives try to handle adv… Show more

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Cited by 11 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…This study is different and significant from other previous studies as the participants described their ways and preparation of uses of strategies. This was not found in published previous studies 5,24,6 . This could be helpful and a guide for the next users of these strategies for managing the symptoms with non-pharmacological strategies as being safe and not harmful.…”
Section: Symptom Management Strategiescontrasting
confidence: 77%
“…This study is different and significant from other previous studies as the participants described their ways and preparation of uses of strategies. This was not found in published previous studies 5,24,6 . This could be helpful and a guide for the next users of these strategies for managing the symptoms with non-pharmacological strategies as being safe and not harmful.…”
Section: Symptom Management Strategiescontrasting
confidence: 77%
“…For this paper, we limit the results to questions concerning communication. Further results are published separately (Sparla et al, 2016(Sparla et al, , 2017. We identified two main categories: communication prior to disclosure of diagnosis and communication during further treatment.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For the conversations, milestones were defined at specific points in the disease trajectory (diagnosis, stable phase, progression, transition to best supportive care). Previously identified (information) needs specific to the milestones [15][16][17] were addressed in face-to-face conversations between patients (and family caregivers) and an interprofessional tandem of nurse and physician (with experience in oncology and palliative care). Particularly, milestone 1 focused on the disclosure of diagnosis and prognosis, and milestone 2 addressed the stable phase treatment with response under cancer-specific treatment.…”
Section: Interventionsmentioning
confidence: 99%