Helping Her Heal-Ghana: A pilot feasibility study of a culturally adapted educational counseling intervention for spouse caregivers of women with breast cancer.

IF 1.9 4区 医学 Q3 HEALTH POLICY & SERVICES
Brenda Adei Osei-Assibey, Frances Marcus Lewis
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Abstract

Introduction: Breast cancer is the leading cancer in Ghana, Africa, accounting for 31% of all cancers in women. The effects of breast cancer are not limited to the woman but also impact the spouse's anxiety, depressed mood, and coping behavior. Helping Her Heal (HHH)-Ghana is a culturally adapted evidenced-based intervention with potential to improve health outcomes of spouse caregivers.

Objectives: The purpose of the study was to ascertain the feasibility, acceptability, and short-term impact of HHH-Ghana, a culturally adapted evidenced-based intervention for spouses of women with breast cancer in Ghana.

Methods: The study used a single group pre-post design. Participants (n = 14) were recruited from medical care providers and were eligible if they were spouse caregivers of wives with Stage I, II, or III breast cancer, were 18 years or older, and had been living with their wives for at least 6 months. Data were obtained by spouse self-report on standardized measures of depressed mood, anxiety, self-care skills, self-efficacy to support their wife, self-efficacy to carry out their own self-care, and the quality of marital communication about breast cancer. Exit interviews were additionally obtained to describe the gains spouses attributed to their participation in the study.

Results: The HHH-Ghana study was feasible and acceptable. Spouses actively engaged in each intervention session and completed the at-home assignments; retention was 87.5%. Spouses significantly improved on standardized measures of anxiety (p = 0.010), depressed mood (p = 0.002), self-care skills (p = 0.006), and their self-efficacy in supporting their wife (p = 0.001) and in carrying out their own self-care (p = 0.011). Although there was no statistically significant change in marital communication, spouses reported in their exit interviews that the intervention enabled them to communicate better and be more attentive listeners to their wives.

Significance of results: Results warrant a larger clinical trial in Ghana.

引言乳腺癌是非洲加纳的主要癌症,占女性癌症总数的 31%。乳腺癌的影响不仅限于女性,还会影响配偶的焦虑、抑郁情绪和应对行为。加纳 "帮助她康复"(Helping Her Heal,简称 HHH)是一项基于文化的干预措施,经实践证明具有改善配偶照顾者健康状况的潜力:该研究旨在确定 "帮助她康复-加纳 "的可行性、可接受性和短期影响,这是一项针对加纳乳腺癌女性患者配偶的文化适应性循证干预措施:研究采用单组前-后设计。参与者(n = 14)是从医疗服务提供者处招募的,只要他们是罹患 I、II 或 III 期乳腺癌妻子的配偶照顾者,年龄在 18 岁或以上,并与妻子共同生活至少 6 个月,就符合条件。数据由配偶自我报告,内容包括抑郁情绪、焦虑、自我护理技能、支持妻子的自我效能、自己进行自我护理的自我效能以及有关乳腺癌的婚姻沟通质量的标准化测量。此外,还进行了离职访谈,以了解配偶因参与研究而获得的收益:HHH-加纳研究是可行和可接受的。配偶们积极参与了每个干预环节并完成了家庭作业;保留率为 87.5%。配偶们在焦虑(p = 0.010)、抑郁情绪(p = 0.002)、自我护理技能(p = 0.006)、支持妻子的自我效能(p = 0.001)和进行自我护理的自我效能(p = 0.011)等标准化指标上都有明显改善。虽然在婚姻沟通方面没有统计学意义上的显著变化,但配偶在离职访谈中表示,干预使他们能够更好地与妻子沟通,并成为妻子更贴心的倾听者:结果证明有必要在加纳进行更大规模的临床试验。
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来源期刊
Palliative & Supportive Care
Palliative & Supportive Care HEALTH POLICY & SERVICES-
CiteScore
4.10
自引率
9.10%
发文量
280
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