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Featured researches published by Birgith Pedersen.


Nursing Ethics | 2012

The impact of clinical encounters on student nurses’ ethical caring:

Birgith Pedersen; Kerstin Sivonen

The aim of this study was to get a deeper understanding of student nurses’ experiences of personal caring ethics by reflection on caring encounters with patients in clinical practice, ethical caring ideals, ethical problems, and sources for inner strength that give courage to practice good caring. In all, 24 Scandinavian student nurses participated voluntarily in an interview study. The interviews were analyzed within a phenomenological–hermeneutical approach and revealed three themes. The students found themselves in two different states of vulnerability: one in which they were overwhelmed by their vulnerability and began to suffer themselves and the other where their vulnerability became a source of development with focus on the patient. The students’ ethical caring ideals served as fixed reference points in their ethical development, but their ideals were at risk of decline. The students reflected on the barriers for performing ethical care and nurtured their ethical ideals by providing ethical care in secret. Caring in secret occurred also when student nurses did not experience a shared ethos.


Cancer Nursing | 2017

Changes in Weight and Body Composition Among Women With Breast Cancer During and After Adjuvant Treatment: A Prospective Follow-up Study

Birgith Pedersen; Charlotte Delmar; Mette Dahl Bendtsen; Ingvar Bosaeus; Andreas Carus; Ursula Falkmer; Mette Groenkjaer

Background: Antineoplastic adjuvant treatment for breast cancer can cause changes in women’s weight and body composition and influence their general health and survival. Objective: The aim of this study is to investigate the extent and patterns of change in weight and body composition after current standard adjuvant antineoplastic treatment for breast cancer. Methods: Data on weight and body composition from 95 women with breast cancer Stage I to III were obtained during 18 months on a bioelectric impedance analyzer. Changes and odds ratio (OR) were calculated by a linear mixed model and logistic regression. Results: At 18 months, there was an increase in weight of 0.9 kg (95% confidence interval [CI], 0.3–1.5; P = .003) and an average positive association of 0.35 kg/cm increased waist circumference (95% CI, 0.29–0.42 kg; P < .0001). Relative weight changes ranged from −12.7% to 20.5%. Weight gains related to increased body fat were observed mainly in premenopausal women receiving chemotherapy (1.4 kg; 95% CI, 0.4–2.4; P = .007). For menopausal status, OR was 2.9 (95% CI, 1.14–7.1; P = .025), and for chemotherapy, OR was 2.6 (95% CI, 1.03–6.41; P = .043). The OR for weight loss in Stage III breast cancer was 12.5 (95% CI, 1.21–128.84; P = .034) and 4.3 (CI, 1.07–17.24; P = .40) for comorbidity. Conclusions: Results demonstrate that weight changes in a pooled sample are overestimated. However, premenopausal women receiving anthracycline-based chemotherapy show a tendency toward a body composition with increasing fat mass. Implications for Practice: A scheduled assessment of changes in weight and body composition is relevant at 18 months after treatment. To compare future studies, common measuring and cutoff points are needed.


Cancer Nursing | 2017

Understanding the essential meaning of measured changes in weight and body composition among women during and after adjuvant treatment for breast cancer: a mixed methods study

Birgith Pedersen; Mette Groenkjaer; Ursula Falkmer; Charlotte Delmar

Background: Changes in weight and body composition among women during and after adjuvant antineoplastic treatment for breast cancer may influence long-term survival and quality of life. Research on factual weight changes is diverse and contrasting, and their influence on women’s perception of body and self seems to be insufficiently explored. Objective: The aim of this study was to expand the understanding of the association between changes in weight and body composition and the women’s perception of body and selves. Methods: A mixed-methods research design was used. Data consisted of weight and body composition measures from 95 women with breast cancer during 18 months past surgery. Twelve women from this cohort were interviewed individually at 12 months. Linear mixed model and logistic regression were used to estimate changes of repeated measures and odds ratio. Interviews were analyzed guided by existential phenomenology. Results: Joint displays and integrative mixed-methods interpretation demonstrated that even small weight gains, extended waist, and weight loss were associated with fearing recurrence of breast cancer. Perceiving an ambiguous transforming body, the women moved between a unified body subject and the body as an object dissociated in “I” and “it” while fighting against or accepting the body changes. Conclusions: Integrating findings demonstrated that factual weight changes do not correspond with the perceived changes and may trigger existential threats. Implications for Practice: Transition to a new habitual body demand health practitioners to enter a joint narrative work to reveal how the changes impact on the women’s body and self-perception independent of how they are displayed quantitatively.


Scandinavian Journal of Caring Sciences | 2016

Bridging the gap between interviewer and interviewee: developing an interview guide for individual interviews by means of a focus group.

Birgith Pedersen; Charlotte Delmar; Ursula Falkmer; Mette Grønkjær

BACKGROUND In developing an interview guide, pre-existing knowledge about the research topic is essential. In a recent study, we were interested in exploring the experiences of weight changes among women treated for breast cancer using individual interviews. However, to develop an interview guide for the individual interviews that covered relevant thematic and dynamic dimensions, we found existing literature insufficient. Thus, we turned our attention to the benefit of the focus group method. OBJECTIVES This study aims to discuss how a focus group prior to individual interviews may contribute in developing the thematic dimension and translating the dynamic dimension of an interview guide into everyday language. METHODS We conducted one focus group interview of five women treated for breast cancer with experiences in weight changes. Data were analysed using content and conversation analysis and discussed with relevant literature on interview guide development. ETHICS The study is approved by the Danish Data Protection Agency (2008-58-0028) and follows the ethical guidelines for qualitative research. RESULTS Data generation and analysis resulted in themes for the thematic dimension, as well as three dynamic areas to consider in the individual interviews to bridge the gap between the interviewer and the interviewee. The dynamic areas are as follows: The use of words, images and metaphors - a shield and self-protection, Multiple meanings to explore and Staying close to the everyday language. CONCLUSION The analysis made us more familiar with the content and meaning of weight changes among breast cancer survivors. Furthermore, it provided images and metaphors, multiple meanings and a sense of the womens everyday language that calls for an open interview frame to be used in subsequent individual interviews.


Supportive Care in Cancer | 2015

The ambigous transforming body - A phenomenological analysis of the meaning of changes in weight and body-composition among women treated for breast cancer

Birgith Pedersen; Mette Grønkjær; Edith Mark; Ursula Falkmer; Charlotte Delmar

Background: Oral mucositis (OM) is a common debiliating adverse effect following high dose chemotherapy prior to bone marrow transplantation. OM often interferes with food intake and lead to malnutrition, weight loss and impaired quality of life. These adverse effects may require intravenous morphine for pain alleviation, Although uncomfortable to the patient, oral cryotherapy with ice chips has been shown to reduce the grade and extent of OM. Purpose: The purpose of the present study is to evaluate whether an intraoral cooling device has the same effectiveness as ice chips when it comes to cooling the oral mucosa. Method: Five healthy volunteers (mean age 36.2 years) chewed ice under surveillance for 30 minutes. Before the start of and immediately after the termination of the ice chewing, the intraoral mucosal temperature was measured using a modified thermometer. The same protocol was used to asses the cooling efficacy obtained by the newly developed intraoral device. Results: No statistical significant differences in cooling of teh oral mucosa (p=0.12) were obtained. The mean surface temperature following cooling was 25.7 degrees Celcius with ice chips and 24.7 degrees Celcius with the cooling device. Conclucion: The cooling device is as effective as ice chips in terms of cooling the oral mucosa. The next step in this research is to use the cooling devise to establish the highest surface temperature of the oral mucosa, during infusion of chemotherapy, that will still result in prevention of oral mucositis.Introduction Lifestyle interventions might be useful in the management of adverse effects of androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) in men with prostate cancer. Objectives To examine the effects of dietary and exercise interventions on quality of life (QoL), metabolic risk factors and androgen deficiency symptoms in men with prostate cancer undergoing ADT. Methods CINAHL, Cochrane library, Medline and PsychINFO were searched to identify randomised controlled trials published from January, 2004 to October, 2014. Data extraction and methodological quality assessment was independently conducted by two reviewers. Meta-analysis was conducted using RevMan® 5.3.5. Results Of 2183 articles retrieved, 11 studies met the inclusion criteria and had low risk of bias.Nine studies evaluated exercise (resistance and/or aerobic and/or counselling) and three evaluated dietary supplementation. Median sample size =79 (33–121) and median intervention duration was 12 weeks (12–24). Exercise improved QoL measures (SMD 0.26, 95%CI −0.01 to 0.53) but not body composition, metabolic risk or vasomotor symptoms. Qualitative analysis indicated soy (or isoflavone) supplementation did not improve vasomotor symptoms; however, may improve QoL. Conclusions Few studies have evaluated the efficacy of lifestyle interventions in the management of adverse effects of ADT. We found inconclusive results for exercise in improving QoL and negative results for other outcomes. For soy-based products, we found negative results for modifying vasomotor symptoms and inconclusive results for improving QoL. Future work should investigate the best mode of exercise for improving QoL and other interventions such as dietary counselling should be investigated for their potential to modify these outcomes.


Supportive Care in Cancer | 2015

Changes in weight and body composition among women with breast cancer during and after adjuvant antineoplastic treatment

Birgith Pedersen; Ursula Falkmer; Charlotte Delmar; Mette Grønkjær

Background: Oral mucositis (OM) is a common debiliating adverse effect following high dose chemotherapy prior to bone marrow transplantation. OM often interferes with food intake and lead to malnutrition, weight loss and impaired quality of life. These adverse effects may require intravenous morphine for pain alleviation, Although uncomfortable to the patient, oral cryotherapy with ice chips has been shown to reduce the grade and extent of OM. Purpose: The purpose of the present study is to evaluate whether an intraoral cooling device has the same effectiveness as ice chips when it comes to cooling the oral mucosa. Method: Five healthy volunteers (mean age 36.2 years) chewed ice under surveillance for 30 minutes. Before the start of and immediately after the termination of the ice chewing, the intraoral mucosal temperature was measured using a modified thermometer. The same protocol was used to asses the cooling efficacy obtained by the newly developed intraoral device. Results: No statistical significant differences in cooling of teh oral mucosa (p=0.12) were obtained. The mean surface temperature following cooling was 25.7 degrees Celcius with ice chips and 24.7 degrees Celcius with the cooling device. Conclucion: The cooling device is as effective as ice chips in terms of cooling the oral mucosa. The next step in this research is to use the cooling devise to establish the highest surface temperature of the oral mucosa, during infusion of chemotherapy, that will still result in prevention of oral mucositis.Introduction Lifestyle interventions might be useful in the management of adverse effects of androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) in men with prostate cancer. Objectives To examine the effects of dietary and exercise interventions on quality of life (QoL), metabolic risk factors and androgen deficiency symptoms in men with prostate cancer undergoing ADT. Methods CINAHL, Cochrane library, Medline and PsychINFO were searched to identify randomised controlled trials published from January, 2004 to October, 2014. Data extraction and methodological quality assessment was independently conducted by two reviewers. Meta-analysis was conducted using RevMan® 5.3.5. Results Of 2183 articles retrieved, 11 studies met the inclusion criteria and had low risk of bias.Nine studies evaluated exercise (resistance and/or aerobic and/or counselling) and three evaluated dietary supplementation. Median sample size =79 (33–121) and median intervention duration was 12 weeks (12–24). Exercise improved QoL measures (SMD 0.26, 95%CI −0.01 to 0.53) but not body composition, metabolic risk or vasomotor symptoms. Qualitative analysis indicated soy (or isoflavone) supplementation did not improve vasomotor symptoms; however, may improve QoL. Conclusions Few studies have evaluated the efficacy of lifestyle interventions in the management of adverse effects of ADT. We found inconclusive results for exercise in improving QoL and negative results for other outcomes. For soy-based products, we found negative results for modifying vasomotor symptoms and inconclusive results for improving QoL. Future work should investigate the best mode of exercise for improving QoL and other interventions such as dietary counselling should be investigated for their potential to modify these outcomes.


Supportive Care in Cancer | 2015

Changes in weight and body composition among women with breast cancer during and after adjuvant antineoplastic treatment: a prospective follow up study

Birgith Pedersen; Ursula Falkmer; Charlotte Delmar; Mette Grønkjær

Background: Oral mucositis (OM) is a common debiliating adverse effect following high dose chemotherapy prior to bone marrow transplantation. OM often interferes with food intake and lead to malnutrition, weight loss and impaired quality of life. These adverse effects may require intravenous morphine for pain alleviation, Although uncomfortable to the patient, oral cryotherapy with ice chips has been shown to reduce the grade and extent of OM. Purpose: The purpose of the present study is to evaluate whether an intraoral cooling device has the same effectiveness as ice chips when it comes to cooling the oral mucosa. Method: Five healthy volunteers (mean age 36.2 years) chewed ice under surveillance for 30 minutes. Before the start of and immediately after the termination of the ice chewing, the intraoral mucosal temperature was measured using a modified thermometer. The same protocol was used to asses the cooling efficacy obtained by the newly developed intraoral device. Results: No statistical significant differences in cooling of teh oral mucosa (p=0.12) were obtained. The mean surface temperature following cooling was 25.7 degrees Celcius with ice chips and 24.7 degrees Celcius with the cooling device. Conclucion: The cooling device is as effective as ice chips in terms of cooling the oral mucosa. The next step in this research is to use the cooling devise to establish the highest surface temperature of the oral mucosa, during infusion of chemotherapy, that will still result in prevention of oral mucositis.Introduction Lifestyle interventions might be useful in the management of adverse effects of androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) in men with prostate cancer. Objectives To examine the effects of dietary and exercise interventions on quality of life (QoL), metabolic risk factors and androgen deficiency symptoms in men with prostate cancer undergoing ADT. Methods CINAHL, Cochrane library, Medline and PsychINFO were searched to identify randomised controlled trials published from January, 2004 to October, 2014. Data extraction and methodological quality assessment was independently conducted by two reviewers. Meta-analysis was conducted using RevMan® 5.3.5. Results Of 2183 articles retrieved, 11 studies met the inclusion criteria and had low risk of bias.Nine studies evaluated exercise (resistance and/or aerobic and/or counselling) and three evaluated dietary supplementation. Median sample size =79 (33–121) and median intervention duration was 12 weeks (12–24). Exercise improved QoL measures (SMD 0.26, 95%CI −0.01 to 0.53) but not body composition, metabolic risk or vasomotor symptoms. Qualitative analysis indicated soy (or isoflavone) supplementation did not improve vasomotor symptoms; however, may improve QoL. Conclusions Few studies have evaluated the efficacy of lifestyle interventions in the management of adverse effects of ADT. We found inconclusive results for exercise in improving QoL and negative results for other outcomes. For soy-based products, we found negative results for modifying vasomotor symptoms and inconclusive results for improving QoL. Future work should investigate the best mode of exercise for improving QoL and other interventions such as dietary counselling should be investigated for their potential to modify these outcomes.


Scandinavian Journal of Caring Sciences | 2013

Living with side effects from cancer treatment - a challenge to target information

Birgith Pedersen; Dorte Pallesen Koktved; Lene Lyngø Nielsen


International Journal of Nursing Studies | 2016

“The ambiguous transforming body” – A phenomenological study of the meaning of weight changes among women treated for breast cancer

Birgith Pedersen; Mette Groenkjaer; Ursula Falkmer; Edith Mark; Charlotte Delmar


Cancer Nursing | 2018

Investigating Changes in Weight and Body Composition Among Women in Adjuvant Treatment for Breast Cancer: A Scoping Review

Birgith Pedersen; Charlotte Delmar; Tamás Lörincz; Ursula Falkmer; Mette Grønkjær

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