Lost and stranded: the experience of younger adults with advanced cancer

Knox, Matthew K., Hales, Sarah, Nissim, Rinat, Jung, Judy, Lo, Christopher, Zimmermann, Camilla, and Rodin, Gary (2017) Lost and stranded: the experience of younger adults with advanced cancer. Supportive Care in Cancer, 25. pp. 399-407.

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Abstract

Purpose: There has been increased awareness recently of the unique medical and psychosocial needs of adolescents and young adults (AYAs) with cancer. However, the existing AYA literature is mainly focused on curative disease or survivorship rather than on advanced disease. Using qualitative methodology, we sought to understand the experience of younger adults with advanced cancer.

Methods: Participants were interviewed using open-ended, discovery-oriented interviews. Data was analyzed using thematic analysis. In total, ten English-speaking advanced cancer patients who were being treated at a comprehensive cancer center in Canada, were interviewed. Participants were between the ages of 18 and 35, and seven of them were female.

Results: The diagnosis of cancer was universally experienced as isolating and unexpected, with serious illness regarded as a problem of older individuals. The core challenge of living in the face of dying was felt to be constantly present yet typically unarticulated. Meaning-making tended to be constructed around future-oriented goals rather than upon the life that had been lived. Individuals felt forcefully removed from the stream of life, with a perceived interruption in the developmental tasks of establishing adult identity, becoming autonomous, and forming new relationships. All cited a need for young adult-specific services, yet none could describe specific services that would be beneficial. Many expressed reluctance to engage in individual psychotherapeutic treatment.

Conclusions: Advanced cancer in younger adults was perceived by them as isolating and as interfering with age-appropriate developmental tasks. Creative and flexible psychosocial support programs are needed to engage this population with limited expected survival.

Item ID: 69205
Item Type: Article (Research - C1)
ISSN: 1433-7339
Keywords: Adolescent; Young adult; End-of-life care; Psychosocial oncology; Qualitative research; Advanced cancer
Copyright Information: © Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2016
Funders: Princess Margaret Cancer Foundation Hertz Centre Fund (PMCF), Ontario Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care (MOHLTC)
Date Deposited: 31 Aug 2021 22:28
FoR Codes: 52 PSYCHOLOGY > 5203 Clinical and health psychology > 520304 Health psychology @ 100%
SEO Codes: 20 HEALTH > 2001 Clinical health > 200105 Treatment of human diseases and conditions @ 100%
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