Fazzino Tera L, Sporn Nora J, Befort Christie A
Department of Preventive Medicine and Public Health, University of Kansas Medical Center, 3901 Rainbow Boulevard, Kansas City, KS, 66160, USA.
Department of Psychology, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS, USA.
Support Care Cancer. 2016 Jul;24(7):3165-73. doi: 10.1007/s00520-016-3149-7. Epub 2016 Mar 2.
Obesity is prevalent in breast cancer survivors and is a significant risk factor for recurrence and mortality. Weight management interventions for survivors have been diverse in design (in-person vs. phone-based, group vs. individual) and yielded varying weight loss results. Given these issues, participants themselves may provide insight into treatment-based factors that contributed to their weight loss outcomes. Here, we report qualitative results from interviews with survivors in a group phone-based weight loss intervention, with the objective of identifying mechanisms that facilitated or hindered adherence and weight loss. We explored interest in paying for continued treatment as an indicator of dissemination potential.
Individual interviews were conducted with 186 rural, obese breast cancer survivors upon completion of a 6-month weight loss intervention that produced clinically meaningful weight loss (>5 %) in 91 % of participants. A thematic analysis of the interview data was performed.
Five themes were identified as impacting adherence and success: (1) accountability; (2) importance of the group, with varying levels of connectedness; (3) dietary convenience; (4) difficulty maintaining intervention components that required more effort; and (5) importance of internal motivation to attributions of physical activity success or failure. Most were interested in paying to continue the program if it were extended beyond the study.
Key intervention components that participants attributed to their success included supportive group processes and convenience. Results highlight the group phone-based approach as a potential venue for disseminating an effective weight loss program for breast cancer survivors.
NCT01441011.
肥胖在乳腺癌幸存者中很常见,是复发和死亡的重要风险因素。针对幸存者的体重管理干预措施在设计上多种多样(面对面与电话干预、团体与个体干预),减肥效果也各不相同。鉴于这些问题,参与者自身可能会深入了解有助于其减肥成果的基于治疗的因素。在此,我们报告对参与电话团体减肥干预的幸存者进行访谈的定性结果,目的是确定促进或阻碍依从性和减肥的机制。我们探讨了为持续治疗付费的意愿,以此作为传播潜力的一个指标。
在一项为期6个月的减肥干预结束后,对186名农村肥胖乳腺癌幸存者进行了个体访谈,该干预使91%的参与者实现了具有临床意义的体重减轻(>5%)。对访谈数据进行了主题分析。
确定了影响依从性和减肥成功的五个主题:(1)问责制;(2)团体的重要性,团体成员之间的联系程度各不相同;(3)饮食便利性;(4)难以维持需要更多努力的干预内容;(5)内在动机对体育活动成败归因的重要性。如果该项目在研究期后继续开展,大多数人有意愿付费继续参与。
参与者认为有助于其成功的关键干预内容包括支持性的团体流程和便利性。结果表明,基于电话团体的方法可能是为乳腺癌幸存者推广有效减肥项目的一个途径。
NCT01441011。