Self-Care Intervention to Decrease Chemotherapy Morbidity The purpose of this proposed study is five-fold: 1) To test the effectiveness of nursing intervention (PRO-SELF) in enhancing self-care in persons with cancer; 2) To determine if self-care reduces patients' morbidity associated with five selected potent chemotherapy agents; 3) To test the effectiveness of PRO-SELF in reducing morbidity; 4) To determine patient, system, tumor, and treatment characteristics which predict, facilitate, and limit the utilization of self-care during a 4 month period of chemotherapy; and 5) To determine the characteristics of patients who do not participate in self-care. Theories of coping and self- care provide the conceptual framework for the study. The nursing intervention program PRO-SELF: A Self-Care Program for the chemotherapy patient, is a nurse initiated informational-interactive chemotherapy-cycle-specific program designed to enhance patients' self-care abilities in reducing the morbidity associated with the side effects of chemotherapy. An experimental longitudinal design (4 months) will be used with random assignment to the experimental or control group. Morbidity, the major dependent variable for the study will include: number and extent of chemotherapy related complications; tolerance of patients to chemotherapy; health care services received by the patients; selected physiological parameters and physical functioning. Potential intervening variables include characteristics of the: patient; health care system; and tumor and treatment. The sample will include 120 patients who are receiving either cis platinum, doxorubicin, methotrexate, cyclophosphamide or fluorouracil and their primary family caregivers (n = 120). Repeated measures of the dependent and intervening variables will occur at selected times during 4 data collection points. Semi-structured interviews, medical record chart review, self-administered questionnaires and self- report logs are the methods for obtaining data. The study findings will lead to cancer nursing care models and interventions that will promote self-care and diminish morbidity during cancer treatment.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01CA048312-03
Application #
3192418
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (SRC (62))
Project Start
1988-08-01
Project End
1992-07-31
Budget Start
1990-08-01
Budget End
1992-07-31
Support Year
3
Fiscal Year
1990
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of California San Francisco
Department
Type
Schools of Nursing
DUNS #
073133571
City
San Francisco
State
CA
Country
United States
Zip Code
94143
Dodd, M J; Miaskowski, C (2000) The PRO-SELF Program: a self-care intervention program for patients receiving cancer treatment. Semin Oncol Nurs 16:300-8; discussion 308-16
Schumacher, K L; Stewart, B J; Archbold, P G et al. (2000) Family caregiving skill: development of the concept. Res Nurs Health 23:191-203
Messias, D K; Yeager, K A; Dibble, S L et al. (1997) Patients' perspectives of fatigue while undergoing chemotherapy. Oncol Nurs Forum 24:43-8
Dodd, M J; Facione, N C; Dibble, S L et al. (1996) Comparison of methods to determine the prevalence and nature of oral mucositis. Cancer Pract 4:312-8
Facione, N C; Dodd, M J (1995) Women's narratives of helpseeking for breast cancer. Cancer Pract 3:219-25
Dodd, M J; Dibble, S L (1993) Predictors of self-care: a test of Orem's model. Oncol Nurs Forum 20:895-901