Archive | 2021

An evaluation of a cancer survivorship education class for follow-up care

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


The Wellness Beyond Cancer Program is part of a tertiary care hospital in Ontario, Canada. It provides cancer survivors with information and resources needed to self-manage their follow-up care (i.e., learn relevant information and skills to adapt to life with a chronic illness) after active cancer treatment (i.e., chemotherapy, radiation). A program evaluation was conducted on the two-hour survivorship education class (one component of the overall Wellness Beyond Cancer Program) with the purpose of evaluating whether attendance increased survivors’ perceived knowledge and intent to self-manage follow-up care. Breast (n\xa0=\xa0107) and colorectal (n\xa0=\xa038) cancer survivors who attended classes completed questionnaires on information needs and intent to self-manage pre- and postclass. Perceived increase in knowledge and intent to self-manage follow-up care were unrelated to age, gender, or time since diagnosis. After attending the class, survivors reported increased knowledge (F (1,11) \xa0=\xa0144.6, p\xa0<\xa0.001) and intent to participate in self-management of their follow-up care (F (1,103) = 57.3, p\xa0<\xa0.001). Improvements in knowledge predicted increased intent to self-manage (R 2\xa0 =\xa0.64; F (4,86) \xa0= \xa038.5, p\xa0<\xa0.001). Colorectal cancer survivors showed greater improvement in intent to self-manage than breast cancer survivors ( β =\xa0.14, t\xa0=\xa02.2, p\xa0<\xa0.05). These results can inform the development and implementation of future education classes for survivors.

Volume 31
Pages 51-56
DOI 10.5737/236880763115156
Language English
Journal None

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