Home-based self-management using Traditional Chinese Medicine techniques: empowerment and risks in breast cancer survivors' fulfillment of health-deviation self-care requisites.

IF 3.1 2区 医学 Q2 ONCOLOGY
Fei-Yi Zhao, Peijie Xu, Gerard A Kennedy, Li-Ping Yue, Wen-Jing Zhang, Yan-Mei Wang, Yuen-Shan Ho, Qiang-Qiang Fu, Russell Conduit
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background and aim: Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM)-based self-care is widely practiced among cancer survivors worldwide, particularly in China. For Chinese breast cancer survivors (BCSs), it embodies both an expression of ethnomedical cultural identity and a means of health self-empowerment. However, this practice often occurs without professional supervision, posing potential risks. This study aims to explore BCSs' experiences and perspectives to elucidate the purposes and influencing factors behind their home-based TCM self-care engagement, thereby informing future optimization strategies.

Methods: A focused ethnographic design was utilized, with a research framework integrating the COM-B model and Theoretical Domains Framework (TDF). Results were mapped onto constructs of a behavioral wheel derived from the COM-B/TDF matrix. Data analysis followed conventional qualitative content analysis procedures.

Results: Participants viewed TCM-based self-care as a complement to rather than a substitute for standard care, primarily for relapse prevention. Facilitators of this practice included (1) strong cultural beliefs and confidence in ethnic medicine, (2) a sense of health responsibility, (3) heightened internal health locus of control, (4) prior beneficial experiences, (5) incentives from online key opinion leaders and fellow survivors, (6) support from family and peers, and (7) reduced time and financial costs. Barriers were (1) insufficient TCM knowledge and skills and (2) uncertainty about efficacy; and (3) safety concerns. Additionally, (1) the home-based treatment setting and (2) the immature internet-based TCM nurse service acted as both barriers and facilitators.

Conclusions: The interrelated facilitators and barriers underscore that BCSs' home-based TCM self-care constitutes a complex medical-sociological issue involving cultural, economic, information communication, and healthcare service delivery dimensions. Only a minority of survivors are aware of the possible adverse medical consequences. Within a patient-centered framework, healthcare providers must identify the unique health-deviation self-care requisites of BCSs in a culturally sensitive manner, and partner with them in their self-health management, such as telemonitoring their home-based TCM self-care using eHealth technologies. There is also an urgent need to develop clinical guidelines or expert consensus to support these practices.

Implications for cancer survivors: BCSs' TCM self-care represents an intentional health autonomy strategy beyond conventional biomedical dominance, necessitating professional supervision to equilibrate health self-empowerment and iatrogenic risk.

以中医技术为基础的家庭自我管理:乳腺癌幸存者实现健康偏差自我护理要求的授权和风险
背景与目的:以中医为基础的自我护理在世界范围内广泛应用于癌症幸存者,特别是在中国。对于中国乳腺癌幸存者来说,它既是一种民族医学文化认同的表达,也是一种健康自我赋权的手段。然而,这种做法往往在没有专业监督的情况下发生,存在潜在风险。本研究旨在探讨中医居家自我护理的经验和观点,以阐明其居家中医自我护理参与的目的和影响因素,从而为未来的优化策略提供依据。方法:采用重点民族志设计,采用COM-B模型和理论域框架(TDF)相结合的研究框架。结果被映射到从COM-B/TDF矩阵衍生的行为轮的构造上。数据分析遵循常规定性内容分析程序。结果:参与者将基于tcm的自我保健视为标准护理的补充而不是替代,主要用于预防复发。这种做法的促进因素包括:(1)强烈的文化信仰和对民族医学的信心,(2)健康责任感,(3)增强的内部健康控制点,(4)以前的有益经验,(5)来自网络关键意见领袖和其他幸存者的激励,(6)来自家庭和同伴的支持,以及(7)减少的时间和经济成本。障碍包括:(1)中医知识和技能不足;(2)疗效不确定;(3)安全问题。此外,(1)居家治疗环境和(2)不成熟的互联网中医护理服务既是障碍也是促进因素。结论:这些相互关联的促进因素和障碍表明,中医居家自我护理是一个复杂的医学社会学问题,涉及文化、经济、信息传播和医疗服务提供等维度。只有少数幸存者知道可能产生的不良医疗后果。在以患者为中心的框架内,医疗保健提供者必须以文化敏感的方式确定bcs独特的健康偏差自我保健要求,并与他们合作进行自我健康管理,例如使用电子健康技术远程监控他们的家庭中医自我保健。还迫切需要制定临床指南或专家共识来支持这些做法。对癌症幸存者的启示:bcs的中医自我保健代表了一种超越传统生物医学优势的有意识的健康自主策略,需要专业监督来平衡健康自我授权和医源性风险。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.00
自引率
10.80%
发文量
149
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Cancer survivorship is a worldwide concern. The aim of this multidisciplinary journal is to provide a global forum for new knowledge related to cancer survivorship. The journal publishes peer-reviewed papers relevant to improving the understanding, prevention, and management of the multiple areas related to cancer survivorship that can affect quality of care, access to care, longevity, and quality of life. It is a forum for research on humans (both laboratory and clinical), clinical studies, systematic and meta-analytic literature reviews, policy studies, and in rare situations case studies as long as they provide a new observation that should be followed up on to improve outcomes related to cancer survivors. Published articles represent a broad range of fields including oncology, primary care, physical medicine and rehabilitation, many other medical and nursing specialties, nursing, health services research, physical and occupational therapy, public health, behavioral medicine, psychology, social work, evidence-based policy, health economics, biobehavioral mechanisms, and qualitative analyses. The journal focuses exclusively on adult cancer survivors, young adult cancer survivors, and childhood cancer survivors who are young adults. Submissions must target those diagnosed with and treated for cancer.
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