Triggers and Coping Strategies for Fear of Cancer Recurrence in Cancer Survivors: A Qualitative Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Design
2.2. Participants
2.3. Data Collection
2.4. Analysis
2.5. Rigour
2.6. Ethics
3. Results
3.1. Demographics
3.2. Major Themes
3.2.1. Triggers
- (1)
- Intrusive thoughts
“It’s like a dream that comes up in my head every now and then about what happens after the cancer comes back. I want to control it but I can’t control it.”(Participant #4)
“I remember a few times, it was one or two o’clock in the morning, and I couldn’t fall asleep. My mind was full of things about tomorrow’s physical examination. The next day, I didn’t have any energy at all, and I was very tired.”(Participant #9)
“I don’t know why, but sometimes I have this image of me dying in my head.”(Participant #1)
- (2)
- Disease symptoms
“When I first got sick, I lost so much weight that I went from 110 to 100 pounds the first time I had chemotherapy. I was really scared.”(Participant #1)
“Some time ago I had a little swelling in my neck lymph nodes and I immediately thought could it be a recurrence? Could it have metastasized? I had this kind of association. If there is no major change in the body, then certainly not to consider.”(Participant #6)
- (3)
- Awaiting medical examination
“Last time went to the hospital for review, the doctor told me to do gastroscopy. I was not afraid of the process, but I am very nervous about the result. When I was waiting for the result, I was worried if the stomach cancer had come back.”(Participant #3)
“I sat there waiting for the doctor to make a diagnosis based on the CT results, it didn’t take very long, but that time was the most worried and fearful time.(Participant #4)
3.2.2. Coping Strategies
- (1)
- Seeking medical support
“The doctor will tell me how to face my condition properly, so my attitude now is that I will do whatever the doctor tells me to do.”(Participant #2)
“I will go to the doctor and listen to their advice. I will do whatever tests the doctor thinks my disease needs to be done, and take the medicine according to the doctor’s order. I trust them more, after all, they are professional.”(Participant #8)
- (2)
- Self-health management
“I didn’t pay much attention to my body before, but now I am sick and the doctor told me to keep exercising to strengthen my immune system. Now, as long as my body allows, I will take some time to exercise outdoors almost every day.”(Participant #10)
“The doctor told me that both smoking and drinking could aggravate the disease and lead to relapse, so I basically quit smoking and drinking now.”(Participant #5)
- (3)
- Spiritual Coping
“I am a Christian, and our church sometimes holds affinity meetings for cancer patients. We prayed and read the Bible together and I felt that it gave me a firm strength to face the disease.”(Participant #7)
- (4)
- Unaccompanied toleration
“I won’t express my distress, because the more I talk about it, the more worried my family will be. It’s better to bear it myself.”(Participant #5)
- (5)
- Attention shifting
“I will think about my child and divert my attention, like going out for a walk, getting in touch with the outside world.”(Participant #2)
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Variable | n | |
---|---|---|
Mean age (SD, range) | 51.8 (13.8, 30–72) | |
Gender | Female | 6 |
Male | 4 | |
Employment status | Full-time job | 3 |
Not employed | 1 | |
Retirement | 6 | |
Monthly income, CNY | <2000 | 3 |
2000~5000 | 5 | |
>5000 | 2 | |
Cancer Treatment | Chemotherapy | 2 |
Surgery | 4 | |
Chemotherapy + Surgery | 4 | |
Cancer Type | Lung | 3 |
Breast | 2 | |
Gastrointestinal | 3 | |
Gynecologic | 2 | |
Time since first diagnosis | Less than 3 years | 4 |
3 to 5 years | 4 | |
Greater than 5 years | 2 | |
FCRI-SF score ≥ 13 | Yes | 7 |
no | 3 |
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Zhang, X.; Sun, D.; Wang, Z.; Qin, N. Triggers and Coping Strategies for Fear of Cancer Recurrence in Cancer Survivors: A Qualitative Study. Curr. Oncol. 2022, 29, 9501-9510. https://doi.org/10.3390/curroncol29120746
Zhang X, Sun D, Wang Z, Qin N. Triggers and Coping Strategies for Fear of Cancer Recurrence in Cancer Survivors: A Qualitative Study. Current Oncology. 2022; 29(12):9501-9510. https://doi.org/10.3390/curroncol29120746
Chicago/Turabian StyleZhang, Xu, Di Sun, Zhiwen Wang, and Nan Qin. 2022. "Triggers and Coping Strategies for Fear of Cancer Recurrence in Cancer Survivors: A Qualitative Study" Current Oncology 29, no. 12: 9501-9510. https://doi.org/10.3390/curroncol29120746
APA StyleZhang, X., Sun, D., Wang, Z., & Qin, N. (2022). Triggers and Coping Strategies for Fear of Cancer Recurrence in Cancer Survivors: A Qualitative Study. Current Oncology, 29(12), 9501-9510. https://doi.org/10.3390/curroncol29120746