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This is a qualitative interview study that aims to understand treatment burden in individuals who have experienced prostate or colorectal cancer treatment within the past five years. We intend to use patient and caregiver experiences to co-design interventions to optimise cancer aftercare.
Treatment burden is the workload of healthcare for patients and the consequences of this workload on patient function. Treatment burden has been associated with negative outcomes in stroke, heart failure, diabetes, and renal failure. Cancer is increasingly becoming a chronic condition, and involves a variety of self-management tasks for patients and their caregivers. In this study investigators will investigate treatment burden in people after prostate and colorectal cancer. Investigators will seek to understand patient and caregiver perceptions about cancer aftercare, and ways that services could be redesigned and improved to reduce treatment burden, and improve patient outcomes.
We will undertake a qualitative interview study, recruiting patients from general practices and oncology outpatient clinics who have completed potentially curative treatment for prostate or colorectal cancer, or who are on active surveillance or hormonal therapies for localised or locally advanced prostate cancer. We will purposively sample, to ensure that participants with comorbidities, those from lower socioeconomic groups, and rural dwellers are adequately represented. We will conduct interviews according to a schedule, informed by conceptual models of burden of treatment, Schwarzer's Health Action Process Approach, and Normalisation Process Theory.
Interviews will be filmed and/or audio-recorded and transcribed. Framework and thematic analysis will be used to analyse and synthesise the data. Participants will be given the chance to comment on outputs and findings (triangulation).
Investigators plan to use the results of this study, and excerpts from video interviews during co-design events, and to create new interventions to optimise aftercare for patients with prostate and colorectal cancer.
Full description
The number of individuals surviving for more than five years following a cancer diagnosis is steadily rising. Cancer is often a long-term condition. Individuals living beyond a cancer diagnosis are required to participate in a range of self-management activities, including (and not limited to) managing symptoms and comorbidities, self-monitoring for recurrence, adjusting to life beyond cancer/managing psychological sequelae, taking medications, attending follow-up appointments, and addressing unhealthy behaviours.
Treatment burden is the workload of healthcare for patients, and the effect that this work has on patient functioning and well-being. In the 1960s, Thomas Creer recognised that patient participation in their own healthcare was important in achieving disease control in paediatric asthma. Since then, "self-management" has been extensively researched and conceptualised. In the 1980s, Corbin and Strauss characterised three strands of "work" for people with chronic conditions: medical management, for example adhering to medication regimens and attending appointments; behavioural management, such as adopting healthier lifestyle practices; and the emotional management of adapting to a long-term condition.
Increasing patient participation in self-management has mostly been viewed as a positive strategy through which to improve health outcomes, reduce medical paternalism, and delegate some tasks away from over-burdened health and social care systems. Treatment burden is a relatively recent concept which highlights the potentially deleterious effects of increasing patient workload. Treatment burden is becoming increasingly relevant as more people survive into old age, often with combinations of comorbidities (including cancer) for which there are multiple available therapeutic agents and complex self-management regimens.
In diabetes, renal failure, heart failure, and stroke, there is increasing evidence that increased treatment burden is associated with reduced quality of life, non-adherence to therapeutic regimes, and wasted resources. Treatment burden is modified by patient capacity: those with lower self-efficacy, low levels of social support, financial difficulties, and competing personal workload can experience increased treatment burden. In cancer, certain large and distinct demographic groups, particularly rural dwellers and the socially deprived, have poorer survival after a cancer diagnosis. The mechanisms of these inequities have not been adequately explained.
It is feasible that treatment burden could modify interactions with health services, engagement with survivorship activities, and ultimately, cancer outcomes.
Treatment burden is a relatively recent concept which is under-explored in in cancer survivors.
The objectives of this study are:
Qualitative interview will be conducted with approximately 40 patients, with or without linked caregivers. They will be transcribed verbatim, and analysed using Framework and thematic analysis.
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• Individuals who do not wish to participate
41 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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