Prevalence and determinants of the health promotion and risk reduction practices of younger female survivors of breast cancer


Autoria(s): Tramm, Ralph
Data(s)

2010

Resumo

This thesis describes a discrete component of a larger mixed-method (survey and interview) study that explored the health-promotion and risk-reduction practices of younger premenopausal survivors of ovarian, breast and haematological cancers. This thesis outlines my distinct contribution to the larger study, which was to: (1) Produce a literature review that thoroughly explored all longer-term breast cancer treatment outcomes, and which outlined the health risks to survivors associated with these; (2) Describe and analyse the health-promotion and risk-reduction behaviours of nine younger female survivors of breast cancer as articulated in the qualitative interview dataset; and (3) Test the explanatory power of the Precede-Proceed theoretical framework underpinning the study in relation to the qualitative data from the breast cancer cohort. The thesis reveals that breast cancer survivors experienced many adverse outcomes as a result of treatment. While they generally engaged in healthy lifestyle practices, a lack of knowledge about many recommended health behaviours emerged throughout the interviews. The participants also described significant internal and external pressures to behave in certain ways because of the social norms surrounding the disease. This thesis also reports that the Precede-Proceed model is a generally robust approach to data collection, analysis and interpretation in the context of breast cancer survivorship. It provided plausible explanations for much of the data in this study. However, profound sociological and psychological implications arose during the analysis that were not effectively captured or explained by the theories underpinning the model. A sociological filter—such as Turner’s explanation of the meaning of the body and embodiment in the social sphere (Turner, 2008)—and the psychological concerns teased out in Mishel’s (1990) Uncertainty in Illness Theory, provided a useful dimension to the findings generated through the Precede-Proceed model. The thesis concludes with several recommendations for future research, clinical practice and education in this context.

Formato

application/pdf

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/39300/

Publicador

Queensland University of Technology

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/39300/1/Ralph_Tramm_Thesis.pdf

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/39300/2/Ralph_Tramm_Citation.pdf

Tramm, Ralph (2010) Prevalence and determinants of the health promotion and risk reduction practices of younger female survivors of breast cancer. Masters by Research thesis, Queensland University of Technology.

Fonte

Faculty of Health; School of Nursing

Palavras-Chave #breast cancer, survivorship, premenopausal, health promotion, quality of life, Precede-Proceed model, sociocultural influences
Tipo

Thesis