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A qualitative exploration of physical and psychosocial well‐being in the short and long term after treatments for cervical cancer

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journal contribution
posted on 2022-03-10, 06:06 authored by Nessa Millet, Esther L Moss, Fehmidah Munir, Eva Rogers, Hilary J McDermott
Objective
Cervical cancer is predominantly a cancer of younger women, and improvements in oncological outcomes have led to an increase in cervical cancer survivors living with the long-term effects of treatment. Understanding the recovery process after treatment is essential to increase awareness of the short- and long-term needs of survivors. The aim of this study was to qualitatively explore the recovery process and return to daily activity of cervical cancers survivors from a biopsychosocial perspective.

Methods
Participants were 21 women treated for cervical cancer between the ages of 18 and 60 years, living in the United Kingdom. Interviews were undertaken face to face and via the telephone using a semi-structured interview schedule.

Results
Data analysis revealed themes which represented participants' experience and perceptions of treatment as a paradox; emotional needs after treatment; and a journey of adversarial growth.

A key finding from this analysis was the nuanced experiences between treatment modalities, with physical changes perceived to be more disruptive following radical treatments, whilst psychological repercussions were significant regardless of treatment type.

Conclusion
This study provides novel insight into the varied recovery experiences of those treated with surgery and/or chemoradiotherapy for cervical cancer, which can be used to improve the survivorship experience.

Funding

Leicester Biomedical Research Centre

National Institute for Health Research

Loughborough University

Economic and Social Research Council. Grant Number: ES/P000711/1

History

Citation

European Journal of Cancer Care, Volume 31, Issue 2, March 2022, e13560

Author affiliation

Leicester Cancer Research Centre, University of Leicester

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

European Journal of Cancer Care

Volume

31

Issue

2

Publisher

Wiley

issn

0961-5423

eissn

1365-2354

Acceptance date

2022-01-26

Copyright date

2022

Available date

2023-02-15

Language

en

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