Thinking well beyond diagnosis: a four-year evaluation of a cognitive changes education for breast cancer survivors

Jacqueline B Vo,1 Silvia Gisiger-Camata,1 Kayla A Lewis,1 Timiya S Nolan,2 Jennifer R Bail,3 Bailey A Hendricks,1 David E Vance,1 Karen Meneses†,11School of Nursing, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL, USA; 2College of Nursing, The Ohio State Univeristy, Columbus, OH, USA...

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Main Authors: Vo JB, Gisiger-Camata S, Lewis KA, Nolan TS, Bail JR, Hendricks BA, Vance DE, Meneses K
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Dove Medical Press 2019-07-01
Series:Nursing : Research and Reviews
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.dovepress.com/thinking-well-beyond-diagnosis-a-four-year-evaluation-of-a-cognitive-c-peer-reviewed-article-NRR
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spelling doaj-c58176f752a244f5971c3e5d0e0db3722020-11-25T02:36:35ZengDove Medical PressNursing : Research and Reviews2230-522X2019-07-01Volume 9212946898Thinking well beyond diagnosis: a four-year evaluation of a cognitive changes education for breast cancer survivorsVo JBGisiger-Camata SLewis KANolan TSBail JRHendricks BAVance DEMeneses KJacqueline B Vo,1 Silvia Gisiger-Camata,1 Kayla A Lewis,1 Timiya S Nolan,2 Jennifer R Bail,3 Bailey A Hendricks,1 David E Vance,1 Karen Meneses†,11School of Nursing, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL, USA; 2College of Nursing, The Ohio State Univeristy, Columbus, OH, USA; 3Department of Nutrition Sciences, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL, USA†Karen Meneses passed away on August 01, 2018Purpose: Cognitive changes affect up to 75% of breast cancer survivors during treatment and 35% after treatment. There remains a paucity of cognitive change-focused education programs for breast cancer survivors. The Think Well: Healthy Living to Improve Cognitive Function program was developed to address cognitive changes in Alabama breast cancer survivors. The purpose of this article is to report program development and expansion over four years and attendees’ program satisfaction.Methods: A seven-step framework (identify, connect, assess, tailor, plan, deliver, and evaluate) was used to develop and implement the Think Well program. The 2-h seminars, tailored to each respective community, consisted of face-to-face lecture-style education grounded on an evidence-based curriculum. Seminars were assessed using surveys that focused on attendees’ satisfaction and were delivered at the end of each Think Well seminar. The surveys were summarized using descriptive statistics.Results: Over four years, 17 Think Well seminars were delivered to a total of 666 attendees, and 515 (77% response rate) completed a survey. Of which, 151 reported to be breast cancer survivors, 209 family and friends, and 155 others. Think Well received mostly “good” or “excellent” ratings on all educational program components in the evaluation. After receiving feedback from attendees, the Think Well program was also adapted to create an interactive website.Conclusion: Think Well seminars were well-received and provided cognitive change-focused cancer education for an underserved and diverse population. Implications include disseminating Think Well to a multi-state or national platform, implementing Think Well education using social media engagement, and collaborating with health-care professionals to provide cognitive change information.Keywords: survivorship, community-based program, breast cancer, cognitive changes, chemo-brain, cancer educationhttps://www.dovepress.com/thinking-well-beyond-diagnosis-a-four-year-evaluation-of-a-cognitive-c-peer-reviewed-article-NRRBreast cancersurvivorshipeducationcommunity-based programcognitive changes
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Vo JB
Gisiger-Camata S
Lewis KA
Nolan TS
Bail JR
Hendricks BA
Vance DE
Meneses K
spellingShingle Vo JB
Gisiger-Camata S
Lewis KA
Nolan TS
Bail JR
Hendricks BA
Vance DE
Meneses K
Thinking well beyond diagnosis: a four-year evaluation of a cognitive changes education for breast cancer survivors
Nursing : Research and Reviews
Breast cancer
survivorship
education
community-based program
cognitive changes
author_facet Vo JB
Gisiger-Camata S
Lewis KA
Nolan TS
Bail JR
Hendricks BA
Vance DE
Meneses K
author_sort Vo JB
title Thinking well beyond diagnosis: a four-year evaluation of a cognitive changes education for breast cancer survivors
title_short Thinking well beyond diagnosis: a four-year evaluation of a cognitive changes education for breast cancer survivors
title_full Thinking well beyond diagnosis: a four-year evaluation of a cognitive changes education for breast cancer survivors
title_fullStr Thinking well beyond diagnosis: a four-year evaluation of a cognitive changes education for breast cancer survivors
title_full_unstemmed Thinking well beyond diagnosis: a four-year evaluation of a cognitive changes education for breast cancer survivors
title_sort thinking well beyond diagnosis: a four-year evaluation of a cognitive changes education for breast cancer survivors
publisher Dove Medical Press
series Nursing : Research and Reviews
issn 2230-522X
publishDate 2019-07-01
description Jacqueline B Vo,1 Silvia Gisiger-Camata,1 Kayla A Lewis,1 Timiya S Nolan,2 Jennifer R Bail,3 Bailey A Hendricks,1 David E Vance,1 Karen Meneses†,11School of Nursing, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL, USA; 2College of Nursing, The Ohio State Univeristy, Columbus, OH, USA; 3Department of Nutrition Sciences, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL, USA†Karen Meneses passed away on August 01, 2018Purpose: Cognitive changes affect up to 75% of breast cancer survivors during treatment and 35% after treatment. There remains a paucity of cognitive change-focused education programs for breast cancer survivors. The Think Well: Healthy Living to Improve Cognitive Function program was developed to address cognitive changes in Alabama breast cancer survivors. The purpose of this article is to report program development and expansion over four years and attendees’ program satisfaction.Methods: A seven-step framework (identify, connect, assess, tailor, plan, deliver, and evaluate) was used to develop and implement the Think Well program. The 2-h seminars, tailored to each respective community, consisted of face-to-face lecture-style education grounded on an evidence-based curriculum. Seminars were assessed using surveys that focused on attendees’ satisfaction and were delivered at the end of each Think Well seminar. The surveys were summarized using descriptive statistics.Results: Over four years, 17 Think Well seminars were delivered to a total of 666 attendees, and 515 (77% response rate) completed a survey. Of which, 151 reported to be breast cancer survivors, 209 family and friends, and 155 others. Think Well received mostly “good” or “excellent” ratings on all educational program components in the evaluation. After receiving feedback from attendees, the Think Well program was also adapted to create an interactive website.Conclusion: Think Well seminars were well-received and provided cognitive change-focused cancer education for an underserved and diverse population. Implications include disseminating Think Well to a multi-state or national platform, implementing Think Well education using social media engagement, and collaborating with health-care professionals to provide cognitive change information.Keywords: survivorship, community-based program, breast cancer, cognitive changes, chemo-brain, cancer education
topic Breast cancer
survivorship
education
community-based program
cognitive changes
url https://www.dovepress.com/thinking-well-beyond-diagnosis-a-four-year-evaluation-of-a-cognitive-c-peer-reviewed-article-NRR
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