Aim and hypothesis: This study was conducted to evaluate the effect of mobile information given to women before and after breast cancer surgery on anxiety, distress, and quality of life. E-mobile information given to women before and after breast cancer surgery reduces the level of anxiety (I) and the level of distress (II), and positively affects their quality of life (III). Methods: This randomized controlled study was conducted between April and August 2021 in the surgical oncology clinic-outpatient clinics of a university hospital. Patients in the intervention group (n=42) used the mobile information application for one month with routine care. Patients in the control group (n=40) received their routine care. Data were collected with data collection forms one week before and three weeks after surgery.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
82
The mobile application had three sections: Information forum (I), Personal forum (notebook and reminder) (II) and Ask the Researcher (messaging) (III). The information forum (Figure 2) is a section that enables patients to access related articles, pictures, and videos. The personal forum is a section that allows patients to create their notes and use the necessary reminders. Ask the researcher section allows patients to communicate with the researcher via messages. The participants could download the mobile application with the name "Breast Cancer Surgery Information Guide" from the Google Play Store and install it on their phones. Users who were authenticated by the researcher were able to access the content with an e-mail and password.
Suleyman Demirel University
Isparta, Turkey (Türkiye)
Change of NCCN Distress Thermometer score at baseline and one month later
This scale was developed by Roth et al. (1998) to measure psycho-social distress in cancer patients. It consists of the visual analog scale that individuals can apply on their own, consists of only one question, and is used to evaluate the stress situations patients have experienced in the last week and a list of problems. There is a thermometer with numbers from 0 to 10 on the scale. On the distress thermometer, a score of 0 indicates that the individual has never experienced distress, and a score of 10 indicates that he or she has experienced distress at the upper limit.
Time frame: The first measurement was collected one week before surgery. The second measurement was collected 3 weeks after surgery.
Change of Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale score at baseline and one month later
The HAD is a self-report scale used to diagnose anxiety and depression in a short time and to determine the risk group in patients with physical illness and/or applying to primary health care services. Only the Anxiety subscale (HAD-A) was used in this study. Anxiety subscale consists of 7 items (1st, 3rd, 5th, 7th, 9th, 11th and 13th questions). Items 1, 3, 5, 11, and 13 show gradually decreasing severity. The score that can be obtained from the HAD-A ranges between 0 and 21 (min.-max.).
Time frame: The first measurement was collected one week before surgery. The second measurement was collected 3 weeks after surgery.
Change of FACT-G Quality of Life Scale score at baseline and one month later
Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-General (version 4) Quality of Life Scale consists of 4 dimensions; physical well-being (7 items), social/family well-being (7 items), emotional well-being (6 items), and functional well-being (7 items). There are a total of 27 questions on the scale. The scale has a 5-point Likert-type structure and is scored between 0-4. All questions are used to assess the patients' quality of life in the last 7 days. The total score of the scale is equal to the sum of the sub-dimensions, and a high score on the scale indicates a high quality of life.
Time frame: The first measurement was collected one week before surgery. The second measurement was collected 3 weeks after surgery.
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