Adolescents with cancer who were diagnosed within two years suffered severe emotional distress. Bibliotherapy therapy uses healing materials as a medium to enable individuals experiencing emotional distress to obtain emotional healing through story situations, thereby enhancing resilience. However, there is a lack of research on bibliotherapy in adolescents with cancer. Therefore, the investigators would like to evaluate the effectiveness of interactive bibliotherapy in improving emotional distress and coping strategies and enhancing the resilience of adolescents with cancer compared to reading bibliotherapy.
A multicenter randomized controlled trial will be conducted. Adolescents aged 10 to 19 years and diagnosed with cancer or relapse during the first two years will be included in the study. Seventy participants from three medical centers in northern Taiwan will be assigned to experimental or comparison groups through blocked randomization. The experimental group will receive the interactive bibliotherapy twice, and the comparison group will receive the reading bibliotherapy twice. The Positive and Negative Affect Schedule, Pediatric Cancer Coping Scale, and Haase Adolescent Resilience in Illness Scale will be used to measure participants' emotional distress, coping strategies and resilience at the time points of pre-intervention, after the intervention, and follow-up for a month after the intervention. An interview will be conducted over the intervention for a month. The generalized estimating equation will be used to analyze the two groups' emotional distress, coping strategies, and resilience. The content analysis will be performed to analyze the interview data. It is hoped that the results of this study can prove that bibliotherapy has the potential to improve emotional distress and coping strategies and enhance resilience in adolescents with cancer. This study is expected to provide health providers with novel evidence on the effectiveness of an intervention to take care of patients with cancer. Furthermore, this study provides an interdisciplinary intervention of nursing and other domain, and it may be extended to further research to improve patient care quality through cross-disciplinary coordination.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
27
The researcher selected two picture books whose central issues are about the common emotional distress of adolescents with cancer, that is, negative emotion coping, and self-worth. The researcher will read the story to the participant and then use the interview guideline to discuss it with him or her one by one. The interview guideline for interactive bibliotherapy is listed according to the mechanism of bibliotherapy, including identification, catharsis, and insight, and additional questions leading a reader to think deeply.
The researcher selected two picture books whose central issues are about the common emotional distress of adolescents with cancer, that is, negative emotion coping, and self-worth. The participant can take 20 to 25 minutes to read the story. No one can bother the participant during the intervention.
National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University
Taipei, Taiwan
emotional distress
The Positive and Negative Affect Schedule will be used to measure participants' emotional distress. The Positive and Negative Affect Schedule is composed of a 20-item questionnaire separated into two subscales, positive and negative affect. Each item is assessed on a 5-point Likert scale, varying from 1 to 5, obtaining total points ranging from 10 to 50 on each subscale. Higher scores suggest higher levels of positive or negative affect.
Time frame: Changes from Baseline to Post-Intervention and 1-month follow-up.
coping strategies
The Pediatric Cancer Coping Scale (PCCS) will be used to measure participants' coping strategies. The PCCS is composed of a 33-item questionnaire separated into three subscales, including cognitive coping (14 items), problem-oriented coping (9 items), and defensive coping (10 items). The PCCS is also separated into two parts. The first part of the scale is used to measure the usage frequency of each item, and the second part evaluates the efficacy of each strategy. Each item is assessed on a 4-point Likert scale, varying from 0 to 3. The score for each subscale is calculated by adding all corresponding item scores. Higher scores represent the higher usage frequency of strategies or the more effective coping strategies.
Time frame: Changes from Baseline to Post-Intervention and 1-month follow-up.
resilience
The Haase Adolescent Resilience in Illness Scale will be used to measure participants' resilience. The Haase Adolescent Resilience in Illness Scale is composed of a 13-item questionnaire. Each item is assessed on a 6-point Likert scale, varying from 1 to 6, obtaining total points ranging from 13 to 78, with higher scores representing higher resilience.
Time frame: Changes from Baseline to Post-Intervention and 1-month follow-up.
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