A nurse-led care program for cancer patients receiving chemotherapy in an outpatient setting was formulated. The aim of the study was to assess the effect of this nurse-led care program on cancer patients who received neo-adjuvant/adjuvant chemotherapy in a chemotherapy day center in terms of quality of life, symptom experiences, self-efficacy, health care utilization, and satisfaction with care. Specifically, the objectives are: * To compare the differences of health care utilization between the two arms. * To compare the differences of cancer patients' satisfaction with care between the two arms. * To explore the experiences of cancer patients in the intervention arm. * To understand the experiences of the intervention nurses of the program and their opinions on further development.
Chemotherapy affects cancer patients in many ways. It is common that patients suffer multiple side-effects simultaneously. Psychological distress is also a common problem during chemotherapy. Distressful experiences in chemotherapy may lead to deterioration in a patient's of quality of life (QOL). In addition, cancer patients have particularly high unmet needs during treatment, including informational needs, psychosocial needs, needs in the activities of daily living, supportive care needs, sexual needs, and communication needs. Among them, information is the most frequently reported need in the treatment phase. These unmet needs cause uncertainty, anxiety, and distress to cancer patients. Outpatient-based chemotherapy is now widely established. Despite its benefits to health care institutions and cancer patients, there are attendant challenges. Cancer patients need to take care of themselves at home during each interval of chemotherapy. Without adequate support from health care providers, cancer patients may not be able to properly manage chemotherapy and its effects by themselves. The poor management of side-effects may lead to increased health care utilization. Cancer patients need to develop new self-care skills to cope with chemotherapy. Facing increasing numbers of cancer patients and burgeoning health care needs, health care professionals must address the issue of how to improve the quality of care during chemotherapy. Nurse-led care is a highly recommended and innovative way of improving quality of care. It shows distinct advantages in terms of providing holistic care because it is based on the philosophy of the uniqueness of individuals and the multidimensionality of human beings. The feasibility and effects of nurse-led care are being explored in an increasing number of studies. However, studies of nurse-led care for cancer patients receiving outpatient-based chemotherapy are far away adequacy. There is a need to examine the feasibility and effects of nurse-led care for cancer patients receiving chemotherapy in outpatient settings.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
150
The nurse-led care consisted of a pre-chemotherapy nursing consultation and telephone follow-up sessions during chemotherapy. The nursing consultation was on the day of the first cycle before drug administration. It included: history review, overall status evaluation, need and problem assessment, information provision, psychological support, and referral. The telephone follow-up sessions were delivered within one week after the 1st, 2nd, 4th, and 6th, and 8th cycle. A telephone follow-up session included: (i) The overall status assessment and problem triage; (ii) Care delivery based on problem severity; (iii) Evaluation of the change of the problems on the following telephone call.
Routine care includes: (1) Brief education on possible side-effects and coping skills before chemotherapy; (2) Care on chemotherapy day: vital sign assessment, casual communication between nurses and patients, video about chemotherapy and side effects management. (3) Care in chemotherapy intervals: hotline for patients when they have health problems at home.
Department of Clinical Oncology, Queen Elizabeth Hospital
Hong Kong, China
Change in quality of life
Questionnaire: Quality of life will be assessed by the Chinese version of the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-General Scale (FACT-G)
Time frame: T0: before chemotherapy (week 0); T1: in the middle of chemotherapy (i.e. week 4 to 10); T2: three weeks after last cycle of chemotherapy (i.e. week 13 to 20).
Health care utilization
Five types of health care service will be collected: patient-initiated telephone calls, clinical visits to oncology outpatient department, clinical admission (from oncology outpatient department), emergency room visits, and hospital admission (from emergency room).
Time frame: During chemotherapy (i.e. from week 0 to week 20)
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