Psychosocial Intervention Cultural Adaptation for Latinx Patients and Caregivers Coping with Advanced Cancer
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Method
3. Analysis
4. Results
4.1. Treatment Goal
4.2. Communication Skills Training
4.3. Meaning Content
4.4. Intervention Format
4.5. Integration of the Findings to Protocol
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions
7. Limitation
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Content | MCP | CCST | Definition |
---|---|---|---|
Treatment Goal | X | X | Exploring the meaning of life after a cancer diagnosis by sharing thoughts and feelings between the cancer patient and their caregivers and facilitating a greater understanding of possible sources of meaning before and after the diagnosis and making decisions or solving problems |
Communication Skill: Speaker | X | Guidelines for sharing thoughts and feelings | |
Communication Skill: Listen | X | Guidelines for listening to others’ thoughts and feelings | |
The will to Meaning | X | The need to find meaning in our existence is a basic primary motivating force shaping human behavior. | |
Freedom of will | X | We have the “freedom” to find meaning in our existence and to choose our attitude toward suffering. | |
Life has meaning | X | Frankl believed that life has meaning and never ceases to have meaning, or the potential for meaning, from the first moments of life up to the end. | |
Homework: Encountering Life’s Limitations | X | Three question exercise regarding encountering life’s limitations. | |
Identity | X | Our identity is significantly influenced by the people, roles, and other aspects of our life that give our lives meaning. | |
Experiential Sources of Meaning | X | Connecting w/life through love, relationships, beauty, nature, and humor. | |
Creative Sources of Meaning | X | Actively engaging in life via work, deeds, accomplishments/via courage, commitment, responsibility | |
Homework: Share Your Legacy~Tell Your Story and Legacy Project | X | Tell your story to loved ones in your life in any manner that is comfortable to you. | |
Homework: Connecting with Life | X | List three ways in which you “connect with life” and feel most alive through the experiential sources of love, humor, and beauty. | |
Four sessions | X | Content presented in four sessions | |
Family integration | X | The integration of family into therapy |
Content | N Patients | % Patients | N Caregivers | % Caregivers |
---|---|---|---|---|
Treatment Goal | 12 | 85.7% | 11 | 78.6% |
Communication Skill: Speaker | 13 | 92.9% | 14 | 100% |
Communication Skill: Listen | 12 | 85.% | 12 | 85.7% |
The Will to Meaning | 14 | 100% | 11 | 78.6% |
Identity | 12 | 85.7% | 13 | 92.9% |
Experiential Sources of Meaning | 12 | 85.7% | 13 | 92.9% |
Homework: Share Your Legacy~Tell Your Story and Legacy Project | 12 | 85.7% | 14 | 100% |
Homework: Connecting with Life | 14 | 100% | 13 | 92.9% |
Family integration | 12 | 85.7% | 12 | 85.7% |
Categories | Themes | Response |
---|---|---|
High acceptance of intervention content | Treatment Goal | 12 |
Communication Skill: Speaker | 14 | |
Communication Skill: Listen | 13 | |
The will to meaning | 10 | |
Life has a meaning | 10 | |
Freedom of will | 11 | |
Homework: Encountering Life’s Limitations | 10 | |
Identity | 12 | |
Experiential | 12 | |
Creative sources of meaning | 13 | |
Homework: Share Your Legacy~Tell Your Story and Legacy Project | 10 | |
Homework: Connecting with life | 13 | |
4 sessions | 10 | |
Moderate acceptance of of intervention content | Homework: Encountering life’s limitations | 2 |
Identity | 1 | |
Experiential | 1 | |
Creative sources of Meaning | 1 | |
Homework: Share Your Legacy~Tell Your Story and Legacy Project | 2 | |
Low acceptance of intervention content | Treatment Goal | 2 |
The will to Meaning | 1 | |
Life has meaning | 1 | |
Freedom of will | 1 | |
Homework: Encountering Life’s Limitations | 1 | |
Experiential | 1 | |
Homework: Share Your Legacy~Tell Your Story and Legacy Project | 2 | |
4 sessions | 2 | |
Neutral | Communication Skill: Listen | 1 |
The will to Meaning | 1 | |
Life has meaning | 3 | |
Freedom of will | 2 | |
Communication Skill: Listen | 1 | |
Homework: Encountering Life’s Limitations | 1 | |
Identity | 1 | |
Homework: Connecting with Life | 1 | |
4 sessions | 2 |
Themes | Illustrative Quotations for High Acceptance |
---|---|
Treatment Goal | Regarding the intervention’s treatment goal, caregiver #3 expressed: “I think, I think it is really, really good. Since, well, how do you say it? Because it helps.” |
Communication Skill: Speaker | Regarding communication skills as a speaker sharing their thoughts and emotions, caregiver #5 expressed: “Well, how can I say it? Yes, they are important. They are good because one must learn to communicate, learn to express what one feels.” |
Communication Skill: Listen | Regarding communication skills as a listener when the speaker is communicating, caregiver #12 expressed: “Yes, it seems fine to me. It is a way to follow some steps that can lead you to not interrupt that person who is perhaps expressing themselves at that moment, saying how they feel and letting you go through these steps. Then you can say: ‘let me hold on and let the person finish, even if I have any questions.’ Because, of course, they can be speaking, the person may be speaking. And if I interrupted them, interrupted them for a moment, I stopped the thought process they were having.” |
The will to meaning, life has meaning and freedom of will | Regarding the need to find meaning in their life, patient #13 expressed: “I liked it… I liked two, the will to meaning (desire for meaning) and freedom of will (free will) because I believe that there are decisions or attitudes towards life, in the face of this situation that happened to me, as well as other people. And I think that you must face it, as you say, on the battlefield where you must fight every day.” Regarding Frankl’s approach to life and meaning, patient #14 expressed: “That life has a meaning was very important, now that we went back.’ People say, ‘one comes here just to suffer,’, but it always has meaning.” Regarding the freedom to find meaning in our lives and chosen attitudes toward suffering, caregiver #12 expressed: “That sounds interesting because, if you are telling me, to put a situation here, a family member dies, my father died, or someone… Well, I have freedom of will (free will) to choose how I feel in that situation. That’s what I’m understanding from what you are telling me. I find that reflection curious, that this person had, that any person, every person, has freedom of will (free will) to choose how they are going to feel, how they should face that situation. Regardless as I understand it, any person has that right or has the freedom of will (free will), but it’s not easy and not everyone can achieve it.” |
Identity | Regarding identity, its influences, and its relationship to the meaning of life, patient #2 expressed: “I like it, because obviously one’s feelings on how one is, how one was and how one is and was after the… (referring to diagnosis).” |
Experiential and creative sources of Meaning | Regarding the ways a person experiences and connects with life through love, beauty, nature, humor, or relationships, patient #14 expressed: “Yes, because not everyone has the same problem or, no matter what the problem is, not everyone can play the same way and anything you can contribute to help someone or, at least, visualize that you have…but a problem and how you can resolve it and how they can endure everything. I bet that it is welcomed.” Regarding how a person actively engages in life through work, deeds, and accomplishments, caregiver #5 expressed: “Very good, they are interesting.” |
Homework: Share Your Legacy~Tell Your Story and Legacy Project | Regarding an assignment where the participant creates a project that integrates meaning, identity, and creativity to generate a sense of meaning in light of their life and diagnosis, caregiver #12 expressed: “It’s a good thing and in the end, the person thinks about this and has the desire to think: ‘Before I leave, I want to leave with a grand finale (gold medal). I want to travel, if I want to travel; I want to eat all the ice cream in the ice cream shop.’ Whatever it may be. ‘Let’s do this that I have never done before and always wanted, let’s do it.’” |
Homework: Connecting with Life | Regarding an assignment where the participant lists how they connect with life through love, beauty, and humor, patient #14 expressed: “All of them lead you to be what you are as a human being. With one you are more open, and others are less open, but all of them lead us there.” |
Family integration | Regarding the integration of a family member into the intervention, caregiver #4 and patient #10 expressed: “As long as the person is in agreement, yes.” Caregiver # 4 “Yes, because sometimes it is important to include another person. Yes.” Patient #10 |
Four sessions | Regarding the acceptance of an intervention with four sessions, patient #1 expressed: There would be four, because there is time to develop the topics. |
Content | Included | Culturally Adapted | Adaptation |
---|---|---|---|
Treatment Goal | X | X | We include an introduction section to discuss the treatment goal and learn about cancer experience. |
Communication Skill: Speaker | X | X | We include the CCST guidelines for sharing thoughts and feelings in session one |
Communication Skill: Listen | X | X | We include the CCST guidelines for listening to others’ thoughts and feelings in session one |
The will to Meaning | X | X | We include meaning-centered content in session three. |
Identity | X | X | We include identity content in session two. |
Experiential Sources of Meaning | X | X | We include experiential sources of meaning content in session three. |
Homework: Share Your Legacy~Tell Your Story and Legacy Project | X | X | We include the Legacy project on session two homework |
Homework: Connecting with Life | X | We include the Legacy project on session three homework | |
4 sessions | X | Content change to be presented in 4 sessions | |
Family integration | X | X | We integrate family related content to the intervention |
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Torres-Blasco, N.; Costas-Muñiz, R.; Rosario, L.; Porter, L.; Suárez, K.; Peña-Vargas, C.; Toro-Morales, Y.; Shen, M.; Breitbart, W.; Castro-Figueroa, E.M. Psychosocial Intervention Cultural Adaptation for Latinx Patients and Caregivers Coping with Advanced Cancer. Healthcare 2022, 10, 1243. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10071243
Torres-Blasco N, Costas-Muñiz R, Rosario L, Porter L, Suárez K, Peña-Vargas C, Toro-Morales Y, Shen M, Breitbart W, Castro-Figueroa EM. Psychosocial Intervention Cultural Adaptation for Latinx Patients and Caregivers Coping with Advanced Cancer. Healthcare. 2022; 10(7):1243. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10071243
Chicago/Turabian StyleTorres-Blasco, Normarie, Rosario Costas-Muñiz, Lianel Rosario, Laura Porter, Keishliany Suárez, Cristina Peña-Vargas, Yoamy Toro-Morales, Megan Shen, William Breitbart, and Eida M. Castro-Figueroa. 2022. "Psychosocial Intervention Cultural Adaptation for Latinx Patients and Caregivers Coping with Advanced Cancer" Healthcare 10, no. 7: 1243. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10071243
APA StyleTorres-Blasco, N., Costas-Muñiz, R., Rosario, L., Porter, L., Suárez, K., Peña-Vargas, C., Toro-Morales, Y., Shen, M., Breitbart, W., & Castro-Figueroa, E. M. (2022). Psychosocial Intervention Cultural Adaptation for Latinx Patients and Caregivers Coping with Advanced Cancer. Healthcare, 10(7), 1243. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10071243