University of Kansas School of Medicine, 3901 Rainbow Blvd, Kansas City, KS, 66160, USA.
University of Kansas Cancer Center, 400 Cambridge St, Kansas City, KS, 66160, USA.
J Cancer Educ. 2024 Dec;39(6):618-624. doi: 10.1007/s13187-024-02443-8. Epub 2024 May 1.
This study aimed to elucidate the relationship between mentorship, survivorship, and identity construction in people who have had gynecologic cancer and participated as mentors in a peer mentorship program. A qualitative descriptive study was designed, and hour-long semi-structured interviews with peer mentors were conducted. Interviews investigated how serving as a peer mentor influenced understanding of mentors' own cancer experiences. Thematic analysis was then conducted. All authors open-coded a subset of interviews to develop a codebook, which was then used to code the remaining transcripts. This qualitative inductive analysis of over 7 h of data was managed with NVivo 12. Seven peer mentor participants (N = 7) were interviewed. Four main themes emerged: serving in the social role of mentor gave participants (i) a sense of daily direction in their lives, (ii) an opportunity to give back to others in the cancer community, (iii) an explanatory reason for their cancer journey, and (iv) the ability to reify their own status as survivor. Providing support through a peer mentorship program helped our participants make meaning in their own cancer experience.
本研究旨在阐明在参加同伴导师计划的妇科癌症患者中,导师关系、生存和身份构建之间的关系。设计了一项定性描述性研究,并对同伴导师进行了长达一小时的半结构化访谈。访谈调查了担任同伴导师如何影响导师对自身癌症经历的理解。然后进行了主题分析。所有作者对一部分访谈进行了开放式编码,以开发一个代码本,然后使用该代码本对其余的转录本进行编码。使用 NVivo 12 对超过 7 小时的数据进行了这种定性归纳分析。采访了 7 名同伴导师参与者(N=7)。出现了四个主要主题:担任导师的社会角色使参与者(i)在日常生活中有了方向感,(ii)有机会回馈癌症社区中的其他人,(iii)为他们的癌症之旅提供了解释性原因,以及 (iv) 能够使他们自己的幸存者身份具体化。通过同伴导师计划提供支持有助于我们的参与者理解自己的癌症经历。