Patient Engagement in Oncology Practice: A Qualitative Study on Patients’ and Nurses’ Perspectives
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Design
1.2. Setting
1.3. Researchers’ Characteristics
1.4. Participants
1.4.1. Patients
1.4.2. Inclusion Criteria
- All cancer patients able to speak and understand the Italian language;
- Nurses working in the two oncology wards and the four inpatient departments;
- Nurses working within the oncology setting for a minimum of 6 months.
1.4.3. Exclusion Criteria
- Patients receiving palliative care;
- Paediatric patients;
- Patients with dementia, cognitive impairment.
1.4.4. Nurses
- A focus group sample was constructed to ensure maximum variability with respect to socio-demographic characteristics, such as gender, age, and work experience, in oncological care. The only exclusion was an underage person doing work experience in oncological care for six months.
1.5. Data Collection
2. Data Analysis
2.1. Rigour
2.2. Ethical Issue
3. Results
3.1. The Interviews
“...in my opinion it’s very important. In the sense that at least you make a patient aware of what’s going to happen, of what I’m going to have to do, I’m going to have to endure or not … making me part of the situation, of the evolution of the situation, of what could be the problems … that is, of the whole treatment pathway”(Male, aged 58)
“I expected that maybe there would be more involvement, saying like today we’re going to irradiate this, today we are going to irradiate this other, we’ve finished with this part and we’re going to start with the other. The only information I was given by the Doctor was that the first part of the treatment lasted 20 days or 25, was about the lymph nodes that had already formed, bombard the different lymph nodes in the surrounding areas. And the last 15 sessions I think, 15 or 14, for the prostate directly […] if I’d have had some more information, it would increase my involvement. We need information!”(Male, aged 84)
“They always treated me very well, motivated, said the right things at the right time eh…very positive experience …”(Female, aged 43)
“if I have some questions to ask, they know how to answer me, they go and ask the Doctor […] then if I’m at home and I need to ask something, I just call here and they know how to answer too”.(Female, aged 72)
“Nowadays we’re lucky enough to be able to decide, it used to be done and there was little to say. So if I don’t like it, I tell him what I think”(Female, aged 65)
“Maybe say ok, the treatment we propose is this one […] but for how I tend to see things, I wouldn’t have minded having a couple of things on which I could base my choice”.(Female, aged 43)
“Ehm yes, the doctor, he… everything, that’s it and so and so he comes there, makes his diagnosis, he says so and so, and then afterwards, basically, the nurse that is with him takes it in and after helps me, that’s it I’m more in contact obviously with the nurse”.(Female, aged 65)
“They (the nurses) yes yes, they explain to you, let’s do this, let’s put this on, that on. Do what you have to. And that’s what trust is all about, because they know everything, what’s it got to do with me? I don’t have to be the doctor. […] and so I say, ok, ok and so I’m there calm. They obviously have the doctor’s indications. Alright I think. So, and so it’s fine.”(Female, aged 72)
“Here you’re not a number you’re a person, it’s really important this, very important, the most beautiful thing there is this. […] why is it important? Because it’s one of the systems to be able to heal, there is the understanding of the other that’s fundamental, it’s almost half the treatment in my opinion, to give me the energy, it’s really important …it also gives me that buzz, it’s important you know? The mind, to overcome an illness it’s important.”(Male, aged 54)
“Once I was hospitalized, in another ward for the same problems, the nurse and the doctor came to find me “so how are you doing?” and they asked about me and I was really happy about that.”(Female, aged 72)
“They even accommodate me where I want to go in the room, because they know that I like to be towards the window lying down, and I know that I can ask them […], I mean, knowing that there are people that care for you, and for me it’s essential, because otherwise you just become a number.”(Female, aged 72)
“The nurse is fundamental because there is always that direct relationship. The doctor has a whole other outfit, right? But with the nurse there is a direct relationship, so it’s essential that ... she’s the point of reference, really a person to whom you can surrender yourself and say here you are now she’ll help me and it’s.… I can let myself go, just say I have great trust.”(Female, aged 43)
“They are very technical, very precise, but also very human and they are able to listen and that’s really nice, I don’t like coming to this place, but knowing that there are these people that welcome me with a smile on their face is something …beautiful. And I also find them very competent whatever I ask, if they don’t know, they go and ask the doctor, here and there, and I trust them completely”.(Female, aged 72)
“When one is a bit down, a push does you good. […] now let’s see if we can sort things out and ask your husband to take you out a bit, to do that, to do the other, like practical things […] because, well, she said to do this too, to go for a walk, to go out for a bit for example, instead of being down, and for me that was fundamental”.(Female, aged 72)
“Every time I come here they give me advice […] now would it be better to do a bit of physiotherapy? And, yes maybe it’s better to have some physiotherapy and then a bit you go to the physio and a bit you go out”.(Female, aged 72)
3.2. Focus Groups
3.3. Trusted Nurse–Patient Relationship
“Don’t stop at the door, that’s it, these are all behaviours that show that you are there and that you’re ready to listen to him, and I would say to show you are sincerely curious about what he is saying to you, maybe “can you tell me again, I didn’t understand it well” I don’t know, about what he said to you. These are all things that afterwards you show him that you are genuinely interested in what he is saying to you and encourage him to talk and open up”(Nurse 7)
“You have to create a safe, protected environment where there isn’t a bustle of colleagues, without interrupting the patient too much because when you start interrupting too many times, something breaks away”(Nurse 10)
“It’s having as much continuity as possible, as they were saying before, both on an outpatient and inpatient level, we try a little bit to follow the patient often so that we can establish this relationship of trust because if he keeps changing people it’s clear that this is more difficult.”(Nurse 8)
“Don’t blame […] if you blame him or even if he only perceives it that way, that the team is talking behind his back and maybe is talking about this non-compliance, they tend a little bit to close themselves off, they tend to do worse or not to do it, not to do it just to avoid doing it wrong”.(Nurse 2)
3.4. Personalisation of Care
“A patient with a very important oral mucositis who had had chemotherapy, a chemotherapy that gives kidney damage, so you have to hydrate. We usually say to patients “you mustn’t drink fizzy drinks and don’t drink drinks that contain for example, I don’t know, lemon”, well this patient wasn’t able to drink if it wasn’t a fizzy drink. She put up with it, it didn’t bother her. She showed me the solution because I could have continued to tell her to drink water, but it didn’t work, but she took this step […] she found the solution”.(Nurse 8)
“You don’t have to do everything at the same time, for example the information about the diagnosis, the information about treatment, all the arrangements, maybe all this at the same time is too much. So you also have to be able to that’s enough now and we’ll go back to that at a later time”.(Nurse 1)
3.5. Information Style
“Here is all that is information, so, making the patient understand what is going on […] so, here, informing with kindness, with calmness, with respect and with the means that he has at his disposal, that we have at our disposal […] the words that are said are the first photograph that the patient takes”.(Nurse 12)
“I try to explain to them everything that surrounds it, that is, also what it means to manage pain, show him on a scale where pain may be unsupportable and what consequences it has, for example, the impact there could be on the treatment pathway, on the stay in the ward. Because maybe culturally we’re still saying ok, well if there’s a bit of pain, I can put up with it, so I won’t bother the nurses. I mean, instead what are the consequences of this and telling him about that”(Nurse 9)
3.6. Communication Strategies
“The professional activity is very important because it allows me to understand if he has been a very practical person, to understand how he tries to reason […] hobbies are also very important because they give me a further clue and another thing […] if I have to explain something to him, I try to take him back to examples, maybe they’re a bit crazy because I don’t exactly know a certain type of work, but I try to get as close as possible to that reality he may have experienced”.(Nurse 3)
“Motivating him, that is, finding a common ground that motivates one to take charge of an aspect or finding something in the patient that stimulates him”.(Nurse 14)
“We see the patient and the family as a unit of care, so we take care of the patient and the people who are significant to the patient, that aren’t necessarily, maybe, close family but they can be other people. Because we realise that the disease impacts on the person and the people around him, and in this family circle we go to see where the resources are, or if there is a lot of suffering”.(Nurse 6)
“She had specifically asked “but can’t I have the opportunity to talk to someone who has already gone through this experience, that’s had the same treatment that…” so we got together for a moment as a team and then we said “ok, let’s see what we can do about this request” and we thought of patients who had gone through the same process […] this young girl was contacted and we proposed […] that they meet, they talked then about a couple of weeks later this lady arrived for her treatment […] when they were saying about the side effects or “yes, yes she told me”, “yes, she told me that too, that it happens like that” and it was a kind of security for her”.(Nurse 7)
“These barriers, from my experience, are due to fear. The patient doesn’t know, is afraid or has had a negative experience, and so doesn’t trust anyone in front of him. So first you have to, in my opinion, respect this barrier, be available, explain everything we are doing, make him part of it. In my experience, after some time in fact, the patient is the one who slowly opens up, I behave with him as I behave with everyone”.(Nurse 11)
3.7. The Care Team as a Patient Engagement Catalyser
“To always be able to rely on people who perhaps have more experience than you, but also perhaps not only clinical experience, maybe who have experienced other working realities, known other patients, worked, maybe, in other parts of the world with different cultures, and who can therefore always give you something more and can perhaps bring you solutions that you hadn’t thought of”.(Nurse 9)
4. Discussion
4.1. Implications for Practice
4.2. Implications for Research
4.3. Limitations
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Patients | Gender | Age | Oncological Disease |
---|---|---|---|
Patient 1 | M | 58 | Leukaemia |
Patient 2 | F | 65 | Haematological cancer |
Patient 3 | M | 75 | Haematological cancer |
Patient 4 | F | 43 | Breast cancer |
Patient 5 | F | 72 | Multiple myeloma |
Patient 6 | M | 84 | Prostate cancer |
Gender * | N (%) |
---|---|
M | 4 (23.5) |
F | 13 (76.5) |
Age (Mean ± SD) | 42 (8.4) |
Clinical setting | N (%) |
Outpatient clinic | 11 (64.7) |
Radiotherapy (ambulatory) | 2 (11.7) |
Radiotherapy (ward) | 1 (5.9) |
Haematology (ward) | 1 (5.9) |
Clinical research | 1 (5.9) |
Palliative care | 1 (5.9) |
Years of experience as a nurse (Mean ± SD) | 14.7 (7.4) |
Years of experience in cancer care (Mean ± SD) | 13 (6.3) |
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Tolotti, A.; Barello, S.; Vignaduzzo, C.; Liptrott, S.J.; Valcarenghi, D.; Nania, T.; Sari, D.; Bonetti, L. Patient Engagement in Oncology Practice: A Qualitative Study on Patients’ and Nurses’ Perspectives. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 11644. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph191811644
Tolotti A, Barello S, Vignaduzzo C, Liptrott SJ, Valcarenghi D, Nania T, Sari D, Bonetti L. Patient Engagement in Oncology Practice: A Qualitative Study on Patients’ and Nurses’ Perspectives. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(18):11644. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph191811644
Chicago/Turabian StyleTolotti, Angela, Serena Barello, Camilla Vignaduzzo, Sarah Jayne Liptrott, Dario Valcarenghi, Tiziana Nania, Davide Sari, and Loris Bonetti. 2022. "Patient Engagement in Oncology Practice: A Qualitative Study on Patients’ and Nurses’ Perspectives" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 18: 11644. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph191811644
APA StyleTolotti, A., Barello, S., Vignaduzzo, C., Liptrott, S. J., Valcarenghi, D., Nania, T., Sari, D., & Bonetti, L. (2022). Patient Engagement in Oncology Practice: A Qualitative Study on Patients’ and Nurses’ Perspectives. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(18), 11644. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph191811644