Article

Fear of cancer recurrence in oral and oropharyngeal cancer patients: An investigation of the clinical encounter

Details

Citation

Ozakinci G, Swash B, Humphris G, Rogers SN & Hulbert-Williams NJ (2018) Fear of cancer recurrence in oral and oropharyngeal cancer patients: An investigation of the clinical encounter. European Journal of Cancer Care, 27 (1), Art. No.: e12785. https://doi.org/10.1111/ecc.12785

Abstract
Fear of cancer recurrence (FCR) is common among individuals treated for cancer. Explorations of how this fear is expressed within an oncology setting and responded to are currently lacking. The aim was to investigate how head and neck cancer survivors in follow-up consultations express FCR, investigate how a healthcare professional addresses recurrence fears, and examine how survivors experience this interaction. We recorded the follow-up consultations of those participants who have reported FCR as a concern on the Patient Concerns Inventory. We also conducted a follow-up phone interview with the participants. We analysed the transcripts using thematic analysis. Five men and six women were recruited, aged 55–87 (mean age = 64). Follow-up consultation analyses revealed that the consultant used “normalising FCR,” “reassurance,” and “offer of referral to a counsellor.” Interviews revealed themes around how they coped with FCR, relevance of personal history on FCR, and the impact of feeling gratitude towards the consultant on expression of FCR. Analyses indicate that patients may feel reluctant to raise their FCR with their clinician for fear of appearing “ungrateful” or of damaging a relationship that is held in high esteem. Findings indicate the initiation of FCR with patients can be beneficial for patient support.

Keywords
communication; consultations; emotional regulation; fear of cancer recurrence; head and neck cancer

Journal
European Journal of Cancer Care: Volume 27, Issue 1

StatusPublished
FundersUniversity of St Andrews
Publication date31/01/2018
Publication date online12/10/2017
Date accepted by journal14/09/2017
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/33568
ISSN0961-5423
eISSN1365-2354

People (1)

People

Professor Gozde Ozakinci

Professor Gozde Ozakinci

Professor and Deputy Dean of Faculty, Psychology