Article

Specialist Breast Cancer Nurses' views on implementing a fear of cancer recurrence intervention in practice: a mixed methods study

Details

Citation

Cruickshank S, Steel E, Fenlon D, Armes J, Banks E & Humphris G (2020) Specialist Breast Cancer Nurses' views on implementing a fear of cancer recurrence intervention in practice: a mixed methods study. Supportive Care in Cancer, 28 (1), pp. 201-210. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00520-019-04762-9

Abstract
Introduction Fear of cancer recurrence (FCR) in people with breast cancer affects treatment recovery, quality of life, service utilisation and relationships. Our aim was to investigate how specialist breast cancer nurses (SBCN) respond to their patients’ fears of cancer recurrence and analyse SBCN’s views about embedding a new psychological intervention, the Mini-AFTERc, into their consultations. Method A mixed methods sequential design was used, informed by normalisation process theory. Phase 1: UK SBCNs were emailed a web-based survey to investigate how breast cancer survivors’ FCR is currently identified and managed, and their willingness to utilise the Mini-AFTERc. Phase 2: a purposive sample of respondents (n = 20) were interviewed to augment phase 1 responses, and explore views on the importance of addressing FCR, interest in the Mini-AFTERc intervention, its content, skills required and challenges to delivering the intervention. Results Ninety nurses responded to the survey. When SBCN’s were asked to identify the proportion of patients experiencing FCR in their caseload, there was no consensus on the size of the problem or unmet need. They estimated that 20–100% people experience moderate FCR and 10–70% severe FCR. The interviews identified that clinical conversations are focused primarily on giving information about signs and symptoms of recurrence rather than addressing the psychological aspects of fear. Conclusion Findings indicate wide variability in how FCR was identified, assessed and supported by a sample of UK SBCNs. The introduction of a structured intervention into practice was viewed favourably and has implications for nursing and health professional ways of working in all cancer services.

Keywords
Breast cancer; Fear of cancer recurrence; Normalisation process theory; Mixed methods; Mini-AFTERc intervention; Nurse; Nurse specialist

Journal
Supportive Care in Cancer: Volume 28, Issue 1

StatusPublished
FundersBreast Cancer Now
Publication date31/01/2020
Publication date online17/04/2019
Date accepted by journal19/03/2019
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/29508
ISSN0941-4355
eISSN1433-7339