Objective: This study explored how patients diagnosed with advanced cancer cope with an uncertain disease trajectory.
Subjects: 27 patients with advanced cancer and with a prognosis of 12 months or more were recruited from the medical/radiation oncology and palliative care service at three metropolitan hospitals.
Methods: A semistructured face-to-face interview was conducted. Interviews were audio-taped and transcribed verbatim. Data analysis was based on Grounded Theory using the constant comparison method.
Results: Results indicate that patients cope by avoidance, remaining positive, maintaining as normal a life as possible, minimising the impact of the disease on their daily lives, comparing themselves favourably with others in a similar situation and focusing on the outcome of treatment to control disease progression. Most did not wish to discuss prognosis or have detailed information on disease progression.
Conclusions: Participants in this study represent an emerging cancer patient population who are receiving palliative therapies. While they have incurable cancer, they self-report as clinically well, they describe a good quality of life and the trajectory of their disease, while unpredictable, may extend over many months to years. Our study suggests that a flexible model of care is needed to support the needs of people who may still be receiving some form of chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy, and remain well. This model may need to take more of an intermittent approach, that is, as required for specific symptom management, rather than patients being linked continuously to a palliative care service for long periods of time.
Keywords: Advanced Cancer; Models Of Care; Patient Coping; Uncertainty.
Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use (where not already granted under a licence) please go to http://www.bmj.com/company/products-services/rights-and-licensing/