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Featured researches published by Inger Öster.


Palliative & Supportive Care | 2006

Art therapy improves coping resources: A randomized, controlled study among women with breast cancer

Inger Öster; Ann-Christine Svensk; Eva Magnusson; Karin Egberg Thyme; Marie Sjödin; Sture Åström; Jack Lindh

OBJECTIVE Women with breast cancer suffer from considerable stress related to the diagnosis, surgery, and medical treatment. It is important to develop strategies to strengthen coping resources among these women. Research in art therapy has shown outcomes such as an increase in self-esteem and cohesion, significant improvement in global health, and a decrease in anxiety and depression. The aim of the present article was to describe the effects of an art therapy intervention program on coping resources in women with primary breast cancer. METHOD In this article, we report some of the results from a study including 41 women, aged 37-69 years old, with nonmetastatic primary breast cancer, referred to the Department of Oncology at Umeå University Hospital in Sweden for postoperative radiotherapy. The women represented various socioeconomic backgrounds. They were randomized to a study group (n = 20) with individual art therapy for 1 h/week during postoperative radiotherapy or to a control group (n = 21). The article focuses on changes in coping resources, as measured by the Coping Resources Inventory (CRI) before and 2 and 6 months after the start of radiotherapy. The study protocol was approved by the Umeå University Ethical Committee at the Medical Faculty (archive number 99-386). RESULTS There was an overall increase in coping resources among women with breast cancer after taking part in the art therapy intervention. Significant differences were seen between the study and control groups in the social domain on the second and third occasions. Significant differences were also observed in the total score on the second occasion. SIGNIFICANCE OF RESULTS This study shows that individual art therapy provided by a trained art therapist in a clinical setting can give beneficial support to women with primary breast cancer undergoing radiotherapy, as it can improve their coping resources.


European Journal of Cancer Care | 2009

Art therapy improves experienced quality of life among women undergoing treatment for breast cancer: a randomized controlled study

Ann-Christine Svensk; Inger Öster; Karin Egberg Thyme; Eva Magnusson; Marie Sjödin; Martin Eisemann; Sture Åström; Jack Lindh

Women with breast cancer are naturally exposed to strain related to diagnosis and treatment, and this influences their experienced quality of life (QoL). The present paper reports the effect, with regard to QoL aspects, of an art therapy intervention among 41 women undergoing radiotherapy treatment for breast cancer. The women were randomized to an intervention group with individual art therapy sessions for 1 h/week (n = 20), or to a control group (n = 21). The WHOQOL-BREF and EORTC Quality of Life Questionnaire-BR23, were used for QoL assessment, and administrated on three measurement occasions, before the start of radiotherapy and 2 and 6 months later. The results indicate an overall improvement in QoL aspects among women in the intervention group. A significant increase in total health, total QoL, physical health and psychological health was observed in the art therapy group. A significant positive difference within the art therapy group was also seen, concerning future perspectives, body image and systemic therapy side effects. The present study provides strong support for the use of art therapy to improve QoL for women undergoing radiotherapy treatment for breast cancer.


Palliative & Supportive Care | 2009

Individual brief art therapy can be helpful for women with breast cancer : A randomized controlled clinical study

Karin Egberg Thyme; Eva Sundin; Britt Wiberg; Inger Öster; Sture Åström; Jack Lindh

OBJECTIVE Recent research shows that almost every second woman with breast cancer is depressed or has anxiety; the risk for younger women is even higher. Moreover, research shows that women are at risk for developing depression, also a threat for women with breast cancer. The aim of this randomized controlled clinical trial was to study the outcome of five sessions of art therapy given at a 5-week period of postoperative radiotherapy. METHODS The participants were between 37 and 69 years old; six participants in each group were below 50 years of age. Half of the participants (n = 20) received art therapy and the other half (n = 21) were assigned to a control group. At the first measurement, at least 17% (n = 7) of the participants medicated with antidepressants. Data were collected before and after art therapy and at a 4-month follow-up using self-rating scales that measure self-image (the Structural Analysis of Social Behaviour) and psychiatric symptoms (the Symptom Check List-90). RESULTS At follow-up, significant lower ratings of depression, anxiety, and somatic symptoms and less general symptoms were reported for the art therapy group compared to the control group. The regression analysis showed that art therapy relates to lower ratings of depression, anxiety, and general symptoms; chemotherapeutic treatment predicts lower depressive symptoms; in contrast to axillary surgery and hormonal treatment as well as being a parent predicts higher ratings of anxiety and general symptoms. SIGNIFICANCE OF RESULTS The conclusion suggests that art therapy has a long-term effect on the crisis following the breast cancer and its consequences.


International Journal of Qualitative Studies on Health and Well-being | 2011

‘They don't understand…you cut yourself in order to live.’ Interpretative repertoires jointly constructing interactions between adult women who self-harm and professional caregivers.

Britt-Marie Lindgren; Inger Öster; Sture Åström; Ulla Hällgren Graneheim

The aim of the study was to illuminate interpretative repertoires that jointly construct the interaction between adult women who self-harm and professional caregivers in psychiatric inpatient care. Participant observations and informal interviews were conducted among six women who self-harm and their professional caregivers in two psychiatric inpatient wards, and analysed using the concept of interpretative repertoires from the discipline of discursive psychology. The analysis revealed four interpretative repertoires that jointly constructed the interaction. The professional caregivers used a “fostering repertoire” and a “supportive repertoire” and the women who self-harmed used a “victim repertoire” and an “expert repertoire.” The women and the caregivers were positioned and positioned themselves and people around them within and among these interpretative repertoires to make sense of their experiences of the interaction. It was necessary to consider each womans own life chances and knowledge about herself and her needs. The participants made it clear that it was essential for them to be met with respect as individuals. Professional caregivers need to work in partnership with individuals who self-harm—experts by profession collaborating with experts by experience. Caregivers need to look beyond behavioural symptoms and recognise each individuals possibilities for agency.


Journal of Family Nursing | 2013

Talking via the child: discursively created interaction between parents and health care professionals in a pediatric oncology ward.

Anders Ringnér; Inger Öster; Maria Björk; Ulla Hällgren Graneheim

The aim of this study was to describe discursively constructed interactions between parents and health care professionals (HCPs) in a pediatric oncology ward. Field notes from 70 focused participant observations and 16 informal interviews with 25 HCPs interacting with 25 parents of children with cancer were analyzed using discursive psychology. Six dominant interpretative repertoires (flexible parts of discourses used in everyday interaction) were found. Repertoires used by the HCPs were child, parent, or family oriented, mirroring the primary focus of the interaction. Parents used a spokesperson repertoire to use their own expertise to talk on behalf of the child; an observer repertoire, in which they kept in the background and interfered only when needed; or a family member repertoire to position themselves on a level equal to the ill child. The results are discussed in relation to philosophies influencing pediatric nursing, such as family-centered nursing and child-centered nursing.


Palliative & Supportive Care | 2013

Sharing experiences in a support group: men's talk during the radiotherapy period for prostate cancer.

Inger Öster; Oliver Hedestig; Mona Johansson; Nina Klingstedt; Jack Lindh

OBJECTIVE Prostate cancer, one of the most common cancers in men, is often treated with radiotherapy, which strains both physical and mental health. This study aimed to describe the experiences of men living with prostate cancer shared within conversational support groups during a course of radiotherapy. METHOD Nine men participated in one of two groups that met six or seven times, led by a professional nurse. Qualitative content analysis was used to identify themes and subthemes in the recorded group conversations. RESULTS The analysis resulted in six themes: living with a changing body, being in the hands of others, learning to live with the disease, the importance of knowledge, everyday life support, and meeting in the support group. The men discussed a wide variety of bodily experiences and described support from healthcare professionals, relatives, friends, and the support group as crucial to their recovery. SIGNIFICANCE OF RESULTS Meeting men in a similar situation, sharing experiences of living with the disease, and feeling allied to each other were important to the men in our study. The conversational support group provided the patient with prostate cancer a forum where sharing was made possible.


Health Care for Women International | 2015

Breast Cancer Survivorship : Intersecting Gendered Discourses in a 5-Year Follow-Up Study

Monika Norberg; Eva Magnusson; Karin Egberg Thyme; Sture Åström; Jack Lindh; Inger Öster

In this article the authors present a follow-up study of womens interview narratives about life 5 to 7 years after a breast cancer operation. The women had taken part in a study during the 6-month postoperation period. Art therapy contributed to well-being, including strengthening personal boundaries. In the new study, interview analysis informed by critical discursive psychology indicated three problematic discourses that the women still struggled with several years after the operation: the female survivor, the “good woman,” and individual responsibility. We concluded that many women with a history of breast cancer need support several years after their medical treatment is finished.


European Journal of Cancer | 2015

1583 Conversational support group participation during radiotherapy period helps women with breast cancer and men with prostate cancer

Ann-Christine Svensk; Inger Öster; Sofia Emilsson; Oliver Hedestig; Björn Tavelin; A. Parfa; Jack Lindh

Conversational support group participation during radiotherapy period helps women with breast cancer and men with prostate cancer


Arts in Psychotherapy | 2007

Art therapy for women with breast cancer: The therapeutic consequences of boundary strengthening

Inger Öster; Eva Magnusson; Karin Egberg Thyme; Jack Lindh; Sture Åström


Arts in Psychotherapy | 2009

Women with breast cancer and gendered limits and boundaries: Art therapy as a ‘safe space’ for enacting alternative subject positions

Inger Öster; Sture Åström; Jack Lindh; Eva Magnusson

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