Prioritising, downplaying and self-preservation: Processes significant to coping in advanced cancer patients

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DOI: 10.4236/ojn.2012.22009    5,578 Downloads   9,705 Views  Citations

ABSTRACT

To date there has been little research that describes the relation between the individual and their environment as the foundation for the coping process in advanced cancer patients. The aim of the study was to identify and describe, from a patient perspective, processes that are significant to coping with advanced cancer. We used the method Grounded Theory as described by Strauss and Corbin. Data were generated through qualitative interviews. A total of 18 interviews were conducted. The central theme was “The struggle to be a participant in one’s own life”. This theme involved three processes: prioritising, downplaying and self-preservation, each of which in different ways endeavours to either maintain or re-establish the feeling of being a participant. The awareness of the processes complement existing knowledge about coping in advanced cancer patients, by showing how patients make use of meaning-based coping efforts to increase their experience of being a participant in their own lives.

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Thomsen, T. , Hansen, S. and Wagner, L. (2012) Prioritising, downplaying and self-preservation: Processes significant to coping in advanced cancer patients. Open Journal of Nursing, 2, 48-57. doi: 10.4236/ojn.2012.22009.

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