Litcius/Paper detail

Young Adult Experience in an Outpatient Interdisciplinary Palliative Care Cancer Clinic

Jonathan Avery, Pamela J. Mosher, Alisha Kassam, Amirrtha Srikanthan, Norma Mammone D’Agostino, Camilla Zimmermann, Yan Castaldo, R. Aubrey, Caroline de Deus Tupinambá Rodrigues, Adrian Thavaratnam, Mahsa Samadi, Ahmed al‐Awamer, Abha A. Gupta

2020JCO Oncology Practice19 citationsDOI

Abstract

PURPOSE: Young adults (YAs; defined as 18-39 years of age) with advanced cancer are a group for whom standardized age-appropriate palliative care has not been established. The purpose of this study was to explore the YA experience and perceptions of palliative care in an outpatient interdisciplinary palliative care clinic for this population. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Using an interpretive descriptive design, semistructured interviews were conducted with 12 YAs with advanced cancer who were being seen jointly by a palliative care physician and psychiatrist in an ambulatory palliative care clinic. Interviews explored participants' understanding and experiences of receiving palliative care. Six family members were also interviewed to build on the YA experience. Data collection and analysis occurred concurrently, drawing on the constructivist grounded theory method to analyze the data. RESULTS: Participants described being referred to and seen in the interdisciplinary palliative care clinic as a conflicting and at times difficult experience because of the feeling of being categorized as palliative as YAs. Even so, there were key aspects associated with the specific palliative care approach that allowed YAs to cope with this new label, leading to a beneficial experience, specifically: provided YAs with time and space to explore the experience of having cancer at a younger age, created repeat opportunities to talk openly with people who "got it," and highlighted the importance of including family support in the care of YAs. CONCLUSION: YAs who were referred to the interdisciplinary palliative care clinic struggled with the category of palliative care but also found the care they received beneficial. Findings provide an approach to palliative care tailored to YAs with advanced cancer.

Topics & Concepts

Palliative careMedicineFeelingFamily medicineAmbulatory careOutpatient clinicNursingDescriptive statisticsPsychologyHealth careEconomicsMathematicsInternal medicineSocial psychologyStatisticsEconomic growthChildhood Cancer Survivors' Quality of LifeFamily Support in IllnessPalliative Care and End-of-Life Issues
Young Adult Experience in an Outpatient Interdisciplinary Palliative Care Cancer Clinic | Litcius