Skiba Meghan B, Lopez-Pentecost Melissa, Werts Samantha J, Ingram Maia, Vogel Rosi M, Enriquez Tatiana, Garcia Lizzie, Thomson Cynthia A
Biobehavioral Health Science Division, College of Nursing, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, United States.
Department of Clinical Translational Sciences, College of Medicine, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, United States.
JMIR Cancer. 2022 Feb 24;8(1):e33083. doi: 10.2196/33083.
Hispanic survivors of cancer experience increased cancer burden. Lifestyle behaviors, including diet and physical activity, may reduce the cancer burden. There is limited knowledge about the posttreatment lifestyle experiences of Hispanic survivors of cancer living on the United States-Mexico border.
This study aims to support the development of a stakeholder-informed, culturally relevant, evidence-based lifestyle intervention for Mexican-origin Hispanic survivors of cancer living in a border community to improve their dietary quality and physical activity.
Semistructured interviews with 12 Mexican-origin Hispanic survivors of breast cancer and 7 caregivers were conducted through internet-based teleconferencing. The interviews explored the impact of cancer on lifestyle and treatment-related symptoms, perception of lifestyle as an influence on health after cancer, and intervention content and delivery preferences. Interviews were analyzed using a deductive thematic approach grounded in the Quality of Cancer Survivorship Care Framework.
Key survivor themes included perception of Mexican diet as unhealthy, need for reliable diet-related information, perceived benefits of physical activity after cancer treatment, family support for healthy lifestyles (physical and emotional), presence of cancer-related symptoms interfering with lifestyle, and financial barriers to living a healthy lifestyle. Among caregivers, key themes included effects of the cancer caregiving experience on caregivers' lifestyle and cancer-preventive behaviors and gratification in providing support to the survivors.
The interviews revealed key considerations to the adaptation, development, and implementation of a theory-informed, evidence-based, culturally relevant lifestyle program to support lifestyle behavior change among Mexican-origin Hispanic survivors of cancer living in border communities. Our qualitative findings highlight specific strategies that can be implemented in health promotion programming aimed at encouraging cancer protective behaviors to reduce the burden of cancer and comorbidities in Mexican-origin survivors of cancer living in border communities.
西班牙裔癌症幸存者面临着更高的癌症负担。包括饮食和体育活动在内的生活方式行为可能会减轻癌症负担。对于生活在美国 - 墨西哥边境的西班牙裔癌症幸存者的治疗后生活方式经历,人们了解有限。
本研究旨在支持开发一种由利益相关者提供信息、具有文化相关性且基于证据的生活方式干预措施,以帮助生活在边境社区的墨西哥裔西班牙裔癌症幸存者改善他们的饮食质量和体育活动。
通过基于互联网的电话会议,对12名墨西哥裔西班牙裔乳腺癌幸存者和7名照顾者进行了半结构化访谈。访谈探讨了癌症对生活方式和与治疗相关症状的影响、对生活方式作为癌症后健康影响因素的认知,以及干预内容和提供方式的偏好。使用基于癌症幸存者护理质量框架的演绎主题方法对访谈进行了分析。
幸存者的关键主题包括认为墨西哥饮食不健康、需要可靠的饮食相关信息、癌症治疗后体育活动的感知益处、家庭对健康生活方式(身体和情感方面)的支持、存在干扰生活方式的癌症相关症状,以及健康生活方式的经济障碍。在照顾者中,关键主题包括癌症护理经历对照顾者生活方式和癌症预防行为的影响,以及为幸存者提供支持的满足感。
访谈揭示了在边境社区生活的墨西哥裔西班牙裔癌症幸存者中,为支持生活方式行为改变而调整、开发和实施基于理论、证据和文化相关性的生活方式项目的关键考虑因素。我们的定性研究结果突出了可以在健康促进项目中实施的具体策略,旨在鼓励癌症预防行为,以减轻生活在边境社区的墨西哥裔癌症幸存者的癌症和合并症负担。