Litcius/Paper detail

Health Information Needs of Breast Cancer Survivors: An Umbrella Review

Nahid Gavili, Shahram Sedghi, Sirous Panahi, Maryam Razmgir

2024The Breast Journal6 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Purpose: The aim of this umbrella review was to identify the main information needs of breast cancer survivors. Since several reviews have already been done on this topic, conducting an umbrella review not only combines their results but also gives a comprehensive picture and informative summary of breast cancer survivors' needs. Method: The search was performed in PubMed, Embase, Scopus, Web of Science, ProQuest, Cochrane, and Google Scholar from inception to the end of March 2024. This review was conducted according to the JBI methodology for umbrella reviews, and the report was based on Rutten's category for information needs of patients with cancer. After removing duplicate and irrelevant articles, 14 systematic reviews were included in the analysis. The JBI checklist was used for evaluating the quality of eligible articles. Results: The information needs were classified into 11 main categories and 86 subcategories. As a result of this umbrella review, one category was added to Rutten's 10 categories. Also, treatment information needs were introduced as the main identified category. Information on supportive care needs ranked second, and body image/sexuality information needs ranked third with a slight difference. Conclusion: . These recommendations can promote and develop targeted interventions to reduce the psychosocial consequences of breast cancer survivors and increase their quality of life.

Topics & Concepts

Information needsChecklistMedicinePsychosocialCritical appraisalBreast cancerPsychological interventionScopusMEDLINEPopulationSystematic reviewFamily medicineAlternative medicineCancerPsychologyNursingEnvironmental healthComputer sciencePathologyWorld Wide WebInternal medicinePsychiatryLawPolitical scienceCognitive psychologyCancer survivorship and careCancer-related cognitive impairment studiesAdvanced Breast Cancer Therapies