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Effects of an Interdisciplinary Integrative Oncology Group-Based Program to Strengthen Resilience and Improve Quality of Life in Cancer Patients: Results of a Prospective Longitudinal Single-Center Study

Authors :
Burcu Babadağ Savaş PhD, RN
Bettina Märtens MD
Holger Cramer PhD, DSc (hc)
Petra Voiss MD
Julia Longolius
Axel Weiser
Yvonne Ziert PhD
Hans Christiansen MD
Diana Steinmann Prof, PhD, MD
Source :
Integrative Cancer Therapies, Vol 21 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
SAGE Publishing, 2022.

Abstract

Background: Patients with cancer receiving oncological treatment often suffer from a reduced quality of life (QoL) and resilience. Objectives: The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of an interdisciplinary integrative oncology group-based program on resilience and quality of life in patients with cancer during or after conventional oncological therapy. Methods: This prospective longitudinal single-center study evaluated the resilience (Resilience Scale), quality of life (EORTC-QLQ C30), anxiety, depression (Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale), and distress levels (Distress Thermometer) of 60 patients with cancer who participated in a 10-week interdisciplinary integrative oncology group-based program during or after cancer treatment in outpatient clinics. An average of 12 (range 11-13) patients participated in each 10-week group. The program included recommendations for diet, stress management, relaxation, and exercise, as well as naturopathic self-help strategies and psychosocial support. Results: There were slight increases in global quality of life scores (week 0: 58.05 ± 20.05 vs week 10: 63.13 ± 18.51, n = 59, P = .063, d = −.25) and resilience scores (week 0: 63.50 ± 13.14 vs week 10: 66.15 ± 10.17, n = 52, P = .222, d = −.17) after the group program compared to before; however, these changes were not statistically significant and had small effect sizes. Patients with at least moderate anxiety symptoms ( P = .022, d = .42) and low resilience ( P = .006, d = −.54) benefited most from the program. The patients reported no relevant side effects or adverse events from the program. Conclusions: No significant effects on global quality of life or resilience were found in the general sample; notably, patients with anxiety and low initial resilience benefited the most from the program.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15347354 and 1552695X
Volume :
21
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Integrative Cancer Therapies
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.bb6efb80b41f4d4890d71eb28bc02389
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/15347354221081770