School of Nursing, Queen's University, Kingston, Canada.
Division of Cancer Care & Epidemiology, Queen's Cancer Research Institute, Kingston, Canada.
Support Care Cancer. 2021 Jun;29(6):3389-3398. doi: 10.1007/s00520-020-05929-5. Epub 2021 Jan 6.
Older cancer survivors are among the most vulnerable to the negative effects of COVID-19 and may need specific survivorship supports that are unavailable/restricted during the pandemic. The objective of this study was to explore how older adults (≥ 60 years) who were recently (≤ 12 months) discharged from the care of their cancer team were coping during the pandemic.
We used a convergent mixed method design (QUAL+quan). Quantitative data were collected using the Brief-COPE questionnaire. Qualitative data were collected using telephone interviews to explore experiences and strategies for coping with cancer-related concerns.
The mean sample age (n = 30) was 72.1 years (SD 5.8, range 63-83) of whom 57% identified as female. Participants' Brief-COPE responses indicated that they commonly used acceptance (n = 29, 96.7%), self-distraction (n = 28, 93.3%), and taking action (n = 28, 93.3%) coping strategies. Through our descriptive thematic analysis, we identified three themes: (1) drawing on lived experiences, (2) redeploying coping strategies, and (3) complications of cancer survivorship in a pandemic. Participants' coping strategies were rooted in experiences with cancer, other illnesses, life, and work. Using these strategies during the pandemic was not new-they were redeployed and repurposed-although using them during the pandemic was sometimes complicated. These data were converged to maximize interpretation of the findings.
Study findings may inform the development or enhancement of cancer and non-cancer resources to support coping, particularly using remote delivery methods within and beyond the pandemic. Clinicians can engage a strengths-based approach to support older cancer survivors as they draw from their experiences, which contain a repository of potential coping skills.
老年癌症幸存者是受 COVID-19 负面影响最严重的人群之一,他们可能需要在大流行期间无法获得/受限的特定生存支持。本研究的目的是探讨最近(≤ 12 个月)从癌症团队护理中出院的老年(≥ 60 岁)患者在大流行期间的应对方式。
我们使用了一种趋同混合方法设计(QUAL+quan)。使用Brief-COPE 问卷收集定量数据。使用电话访谈收集定性数据,以探讨应对与癌症相关问题的经验和策略。
平均样本年龄(n=30)为 72.1 岁(SD 5.8,范围 63-83),其中 57%为女性。参与者的 Brief-COPE 回答表明,他们通常使用接受(n=29,96.7%)、自我分散注意力(n=28,93.3%)和采取行动(n=28,93.3%)应对策略。通过描述性主题分析,我们确定了三个主题:(1)借鉴生活经验,(2)重新部署应对策略,(3)大流行期间癌症生存的并发症。参与者的应对策略源于癌症、其他疾病、生活和工作经验。在大流行期间使用这些策略并非新事物-它们被重新部署和重新利用-尽管在大流行期间使用这些策略有时会很复杂。这些数据被融合以最大限度地解释研究结果。
研究结果可能为制定或增强癌症和非癌症资源提供信息,以支持应对,特别是在大流行期间和之外使用远程提供方法。临床医生可以采用基于优势的方法来支持老年癌症幸存者,因为他们可以借鉴自己的经验,这些经验包含潜在应对技能的宝库。