Aggarwal Sugandha, Youn Nayung, Albashayreh Alaa, Gilbertson-White Stephanie
College of Nursing, University of Iowa, 50 Newton Rd, Iowa City, IA, 52242, USA.
Support Care Cancer. 2025 Jan 24;33(2):121. doi: 10.1007/s00520-025-09164-8.
The symptom representations (i.e., beliefs and attitudes) that people with cancer hold about their symptom experience can impact how they self-manage their symptoms. Having two or more chronic conditions (multimorbidity) can complicate illness representations. Little is known about symptom representations in people with cancer and multimorbidity.
This qualitative descriptive study was conducted with a sample of adults with a diagnosis of cancer and at least one additional chronic condition. Semi-structured interviews were conducted to understand their symptom representations. Leventhal's Common-Sense Model of Illness Representations (i.e., identity, consequences, cure/control, timeline, and cause) provided the guiding framework. A qualitative thematic analysis was used to identify codes, themes, and subthemes.
The mean age of the participants (n = 17) was 62.1 years and primary cancer sites were gastrointestinal, thoracic, or head/neck. Five themes were identified: (1) perceiving and living with symptoms, (2) being unable to do things, (3) self-management behaviors, (4) domino theory, and (5) a side effect of conditions. These themes aligned with Leventhal's Common-Sense Model dimensions. The interaction among diagnoses and multimorbidity was identified by a minority of participants.
People with cancer and multimorbidity described symptom representations primarily in the context of cancer. Consistent with previous research, symptoms negatively impacted their lives, and their representations include an understanding of how symptoms interact. Few participants described their symptoms within the larger context of multimorbidity. Future research is needed to determine how symptom representations impact their communication patterns with providers and coping behaviors.
癌症患者对其症状体验的症状表征(即信念和态度)会影响他们自我管理症状的方式。患有两种或更多种慢性病(多重疾病)会使疾病表征变得复杂。对于患有癌症和多重疾病的患者的症状表征知之甚少。
本定性描述性研究对诊断为癌症且至少患有一种其他慢性病的成年人样本进行。进行了半结构化访谈以了解他们的症状表征。Leventhal的疾病表征常识模型(即身份、后果、治愈/控制、时间线和原因)提供了指导框架。采用定性主题分析来识别代码、主题和子主题。
参与者(n = 17)的平均年龄为62.1岁,原发癌部位为胃肠道、胸部或头颈部。确定了五个主题:(1)感知症状并与之共存,(2)无法做事,(3)自我管理行为,(4)多米诺骨牌理论,以及(5)疾病的副作用。这些主题与Leventhal的常识模型维度一致。少数参与者识别出了诊断与多重疾病之间的相互作用。
患有癌症和多重疾病的患者主要在癌症背景下描述症状表征。与先前的研究一致,症状对他们的生活产生负面影响,并且他们对症状相互作用的理解也包含在其表征中。很少有参与者在多重疾病的更大背景下描述他们的症状。需要进一步的研究来确定症状表征如何影响他们与医疗服务提供者的沟通模式和应对行为。