This study aims to decrease cancer survivors' intrusive ruminative thoughts and cancer-related fatigue and increase their purposive ruminative thoughts and psychological resilience. In this context, an online (Zoom) 10-session empowerment program based on the literature will be implemented for cancer survivors.
From the time they were diagnosed with cancer, individuals struggle with ruminative thoughts about why they have this disease, whether they will get better during the treatment process, whether the disease will recur in the future, and cognitive, physical, and emotional fatigue, the cause of which cannot be fully explained. All these processes continue to negatively affect the lives of cancer survivors during the remission period. Studies show that when cancer survivors manage this stressful process well and learn effective coping methods, they can come out of it by developing their psychological resilience. Therefore, this study aimed to determine the effect of an empowerment program to be applied to cancer survivors' ruminative thoughts, cancer-related fatigue, and psychological resilience. The hypotheses of this research are: H 1-1: There is a difference between ruminative thinking scores at the end of the empowerment program applied to individuals with cancer in remission and in the follow-up measurement compared to the pre-program and control groups. H 1-2: There is a difference between cancer-related fatigue scores at the end of the empowerment program applied to individuals with cancer in remission and in the follow-up measurement compared to the pre-program and control groups. H 1-3: There is a difference between psychological resilience scores at the end of the empowerment program applied to individuals with cancer in remission and in the follow-up measurement compared to the pre-program and control groups.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
62
It is planned to conduct the empowerment program online (zoom session). For this, to protect each individual's privacy, a quiet, bright and ventilated, spacious physical environment and technological elements such as computers, headphones, microphones and internet connection are needed. The empowerment program was planned as a total of 10 sessions, one session per week. In the program, goals and objectives have been established for each session. These aims and objectives will be shared with the participants before each session. The application time of each session is planned as an average of 90 minutes.
Hacettepe University
Ankara, Turkey (Türkiye)
RECRUITINGChange from Baseline Event-Related Rumination Inventory at day 70, and day 160
It was developed by Cann et al. (2011). The 20-item scale has subscales to evaluate two forms of rumination, "intrusive" and "deliberate". The first ten items measure intrusive rumination, and the second ten items measure deliberate rumination. Each item in the scale is in a 4-point Likert type and is scored as 0 = never, 3 = often. There is no total score in this scale, but subscale scores reveal rumination scores. Scores on each subscale range from 0 to 30. High scores obtained from each sub-dimension of the scale indicate the existence of a ruminative thought tendency towards the said dimension.
Time frame: day 0, day 70, and day 160
Change from Baseline Cancer Fatigue Scale at day 70, and day 160
It was developed by Okayama et al. in 2003. Consisting of 15 items, the scale has a 5-point Likert type ranging from 'no' (1) to 'too much' (5). It consists of three sub-dimensions: physical (items 1,2,3,6,9,12,15), emotional (items 5,8,11,14), cognitive (items 4,7,10,13). . The range of scores to be taken from the scale is between 0 and 28 points for the physical subscale, and 0 to 16 points for the emotional and cognitive subscale. Total fatigue is the sum of these subscale scores and the maximum total score is 60. The higher the total score, the more severe the fatigue is considered.
Time frame: day 0, day 70, and day 160
Change from Baseline Connor-Davidson Resilience Scale at day 70, and day 160
It was developed by Connor and Davidson (2003). The 25-item scale is in a 5-point Likert structure as 'not at all true' (0) and 'always true' (4). The scale consists of 3 subscales: 'Perseverance and Personal Efficiency' (15 items), 'Resistance to Negativity' (6 items) and 'Tension to Spirituality' (3 items). The lowest and highest values vary between 0-100, and the higher score obtained from the scale indicates greater psychological resilience.
Time frame: day 0, day 70, and day 160
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