Faculty of Philosophy, Theology and Religious Studies, Radboud University, Nijmegen, The Netherlands.
Department of Medical Oncology, Cancer Center Amsterdam, Amsterdam University Medical Centers, University of Amsterdam, Meibergdreef 9, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
J Cancer Surviv. 2022 Jun;16(3):531-541. doi: 10.1007/s11764-021-01048-0. Epub 2021 Jun 15.
Patients with advanced cancer can experience their disease as a contingent life event. The sudden interruption of their life stories can obscure life goals and disrupt meaning making. In the context of the research project "In search of stories," we aim to investigate the reading and discussion of selected stories which present ways of dealing with a contingent life event. In addition, we examine the use of a newly developed guide for reading these exemplary texts together with advanced cancer patients.
This qualitative study describes the experiences of five patients with advanced cancer who participated in a guided reading and discussion about selected literary texts. The intervention consisted of reading a selected story, after which each patient was interviewed, using the reading guide as a conversation template. The interviews were then thematically analyzed for their conceptual content using a template analysis.
All five conversations showed some form of recognition in reaction to the chosen text, which led to personal identification of experiences of contingency, such as loss of life goals, impending death, or feelings of uncertainty. Besides the important role of identification, revealed by the responses to the questions in the reading guide, the discussion of the text helped them articulate their own experience and sources of meaning. Diverse worldviews came to the fore and concepts of meaning such as fate, life goals, quality of life, and death.
First experiences with our newly developed reading guide designed to support a structured reading of stories containing experiences of contingency suggest that it may help patients to express their own experiences of contingency and to reflect on these experiences.
The intervention tested in this study may contribute to supportive care for survivors with advanced cancer, but further research is needed to evaluate its effect on quality of life.
晚期癌症患者可能会将其疾病视为偶然事件。这种突然中断他们的生活故事可能会掩盖生活目标并破坏意义的构建。在“寻找故事”研究项目的背景下,我们旨在调查阅读和讨论呈现应对偶然生活事件的方式的选定故事。此外,我们还研究了与晚期癌症患者一起使用新开发的阅读指南的情况。
这项定性研究描述了 5 名晚期癌症患者参与选定文学文本的指导阅读和讨论的经历。干预措施包括阅读选定的故事,之后对每位患者进行访谈,使用阅读指南作为对话模板。然后使用模板分析对访谈进行主题分析以获取其概念内容。
所有五次对话都对所选文本表现出某种形式的认知反应,从而导致个人对偶然事件的经历产生认同,例如失去生活目标、即将死亡或感到不确定。除了阅读指南中的问题所揭示的认同的重要作用外,对文本的讨论还有助于他们表达自己的经验和意义来源。不同的世界观和意义概念,如命运、生活目标、生活质量和死亡,都显现出来。
首次使用我们新开发的阅读指南设计来支持对包含偶然事件经验的故事进行结构化阅读的经验表明,它可能有助于患者表达自己的偶然事件经历并反思这些经历。
本研究中测试的干预措施可能有助于为晚期癌症幸存者提供支持性护理,但需要进一步研究来评估其对生活质量的影响。