Weeks Laura, Balneaves Lynda G, Paterson Charlotte, Verhoef Marja
Laura Weeks, PhD, is a Senior Research Fellow at the Ottawa Integrative Cancer Centre, Ottawa, Ontario.
Lynda G. Balneaves, RN, PhD, is an Associate Professor in the School of Nursing, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia.
Open Med. 2014 Apr 15;8(2):e54-66. eCollection 2014.
Patients with cancer consistently report conflict and anxiety when making decisions about complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) treatment. To design evidence-informed decision-support strategies, a better understanding is needed of how the decision-making process unfolds for these patients during their experience with cancer. We undertook this study to review the research literature regarding CAM-related decision-making by patients with cancer within the context of treatment, survivorship, and palliation. We also aimed to summarize emergent concepts within a preliminary conceptual framework.
We conducted an integrative literature review, searching 12 electronic databases for articles published in English that described studies of the process, context, or outcomes of CAM-related decision-making. We summarized descriptive data using frequencies and used a descriptive constant comparative method to analyze statements about original qualitative results, with the goal of identifying distinct concepts pertaining to CAM-related decision-making by patients with cancer and the relationships among these concepts.
Of 425 articles initially identified, 35 met our inclusion criteria. Seven unique concepts related to CAM and cancer decision-making emerged: decision-making phases, information-seeking and evaluation, decision-making roles, beliefs, contextual factors, decision-making outcomes, and the relationship between CAM and conventional medical decision-making. CAM decision-making begins with the diagnosis of cancer and encompasses 3 distinct phases (early, mid, and late), each marked by unique aims for CAM treatment and distinct patterns of information-seeking and evaluation. Phase transitions correspond to changes in health status or other milestones within the cancer trajectory. An emergent conceptual framework illustrating relationships among the 7 central concepts is presented.
CAM-related decision-making by patients with cancer occurs as a nonlinear, complex, dynamic process. The conceptual framework presented here identifies influential factors within that process, as well as patients' unique needs during different phases. The framework can guide the development and evaluation of theory-based decision-support programs that are responsive to patients' beliefs and preferences.
癌症患者在做出关于补充和替代医学(CAM)治疗的决策时,一直报告存在冲突和焦虑情绪。为了设计基于证据的决策支持策略,需要更好地了解这些患者在患癌经历中决策过程是如何展开的。我们开展这项研究,以回顾关于癌症患者在治疗、 survivorship和姑息治疗背景下与CAM相关决策的研究文献。我们还旨在在一个初步概念框架内总结新出现的概念。
我们进行了一项综合文献综述,在12个电子数据库中搜索以英文发表的描述CAM相关决策过程、背景或结果研究的文章。我们使用频率总结描述性数据,并使用描述性恒定比较法分析关于原始定性结果的陈述,目的是识别与癌症患者CAM相关决策有关的不同概念以及这些概念之间的关系。
在最初识别的425篇文章中,35篇符合我们的纳入标准。出现了7个与CAM和癌症决策相关的独特概念:决策阶段、信息寻求和评估、决策角色、信念、背景因素、决策结果以及CAM与传统医学决策之间的关系。CAM决策始于癌症诊断,包括3个不同阶段(早期、中期和晚期),每个阶段都有独特的CAM治疗目标以及独特的信息寻求和评估模式。阶段转换对应于癌症病程中健康状况的变化或其他里程碑。呈现了一个说明7个核心概念之间关系的新出现的概念框架。
癌症患者与CAM相关的决策是一个非线性、复杂、动态的过程。这里提出的概念框架识别了该过程中的影响因素以及患者在不同阶段的独特需求。该框架可以指导基于理论的决策支持项目的开发和评估,这些项目能够响应患者的信念和偏好。