2020
DOI: 10.1093/jnci/djaa083
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Management of Cancer and Health After the Clinic Visit: A Call to Action for Self-Management in Cancer Care

Abstract: Individuals with cancer and their families assume responsibility for management of cancer as an acute and chronic disease. Yet, cancer lags other chronic diseases in its provision of proactive self-management support (SMS) in routine ‘everyday’ care leaving this population vulnerable to worse health status, long-term disability and poorer survival. Enabling cancer patients to manage the medical, emotional consequences, and lifestyle/work changes due to cancer and treatment is essential to optimizing health and… Show more

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Cited by 134 publications
(127 citation statements)
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References 77 publications
(68 reference statements)
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“…In addition and related to the limited access to the healthcare system, an important number of threads corresponded to people suspecting symptoms related to cancer, who sought advice or similar experiences from their peers. We believe that the themes identified in this paper can be used by clinicians when they assess patients' fears and concerns and provide education and self-management support [38].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…In addition and related to the limited access to the healthcare system, an important number of threads corresponded to people suspecting symptoms related to cancer, who sought advice or similar experiences from their peers. We believe that the themes identified in this paper can be used by clinicians when they assess patients' fears and concerns and provide education and self-management support [38].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Ongoing relationships with the healthcare system are needed to manage posttreatment care and require long-term planning rather than acute, prescriptive relationships [29]. Being adequately prepared for post-treatment self-management can empower cancer survivors and improve their confidence in managing their overall healthcare [49,50]. For cancer survivors, selfmanagement skills building should include coaching patients on signs and symptoms of recurrence, cancer prevention, posttreatment symptoms, and comorbidities [36].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In addition to addressing survivor needs, self-management skills building is a key component of personalized cancer follow-up care [49]. In the UK and Australia, where survivorship care is a national initiative, preliminary evidence points to self-management skills training as the driving factor for personalized follow-up based on risk [55].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Future studies and interventions could provide AB modification through promoting active goal-oriented attention search ( Mogg and Bradley, 2016 ; Lam et al, 2018 ) to focus individuals’ attentional resources on the threat itself for threat habituation, or challenge pre-existing dysfunctional schema through information disconfirmatory processes to reduce threat salience, or modify threat appraisal through enhancing cancer patients’ coping self-efficacy, all of which perhaps promote the use of active coping approach for better distress management. For example, provision of self-management support (SMS), which has been recently listed as a priority area for action in cancer care, including interventions to boost patients’ self-efficacy and improve coping capacity, perhaps enables them in effective self-management and optimizes health outcomes ( Howell et al, 2020 ). However, in practice, it remains challenging to ensure healthcare professionals actually offer such support.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%