Current nutrition promotion, beliefs and barriers among cancer nurses in Australia and New Zealand

Rationale. Many cancer patients and survivors do not meet nutritional and physical activity guidelines, thus healthier eating and greater levels of physical activity could have considerable benefits for these individuals. While research has investigated cancer survivors’ perspective on their challen...

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Main Authors: Petra G. Puhringer, Alicia Olsen, Mike Climstein, Sally Sargeant, Lynnette M. Jones, Justin W.L. Keogh
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2015-11-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/1396.pdf
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spelling doaj-c64c23f2f6134949b8a40542f2be24c62020-11-24T22:20:04ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592015-11-013e139610.7717/peerj.1396Current nutrition promotion, beliefs and barriers among cancer nurses in Australia and New ZealandPetra G. Puhringer0Alicia Olsen1Mike Climstein2Sally Sargeant3Lynnette M. Jones4Justin W.L. Keogh5Department of Neurology, Medical University of Vienna, Vienna, AustriaFaculty of Health Sciences and Medicine, Bond University, Robina, Queensland, AustraliaExercise, Health and Performance Faculty Research Group, University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, AustraliaFaculty of Health Sciences and Medicine, Bond University, Robina, Queensland, AustraliaSchool of Physical Education, Sport & Exercise Sciences, University of Otago, Dunedin, Otago, New ZealandFaculty of Health Sciences and Medicine, Bond University, Robina, Queensland, AustraliaRationale. Many cancer patients and survivors do not meet nutritional and physical activity guidelines, thus healthier eating and greater levels of physical activity could have considerable benefits for these individuals. While research has investigated cancer survivors’ perspective on their challenges in meeting the nutrition and physical guidelines, little research has examined how health professionals may assist their patients meet these guidelines. Cancer nurses are ideally placed to promote healthy behaviours to their patients, especially if access to dieticians or dietary resources is limited. However, little is known about cancer nurses’ healthy eating promotion practices to their patients. The primary aim of this study was to examine current healthy eating promotion practices, beliefs and barriers of cancer nurses in Australia and New Zealand. A secondary aim was to gain insight into whether these practices, beliefs and barriers were influenced by the nurses’ hospital or years of work experience.Patients and Methods. An online questionnaire was used to obtain data. Sub-group cancer nurse comparisons were performed on hospital location (metropolitan vs regional and rural) and years of experience (<25 or ≥25 years) using ANOVA and chi square analysis for continuous and categorical data respectively.Results. A total of 123 Australasian cancer nurses responded to the survey. Cancer nurses believed they were often the major provider of nutritional advice to their cancer patients (32.5%), a value marginally less than dieticians (35.9%) but substantially higher than oncologists (3.3%). The majority promoted healthy eating prior (62.6%), during (74.8%) and post treatment (64.2%). Most cancer nurses felt that healthy eating had positive effects on the cancer patients’ quality of life (85.4%), weight management (82.9%), mental health (80.5%), activities of daily living (79.7%) and risk of other chronic diseases (79.7%), although only 75.5% agreed or strongly agreed that this is due to a strong evidence base. Lack of time (25.8%), adequate support structures (17.3%) nutrition expertise (12.2%) were cited by the cancer nurses as the most common barriers to promoting healthy eating to their patients. Comparisons based on their hospital location and years of experience, revealed very few significant differences, indicating that cancer nurses’ healthy eating promotion practices, beliefs and barriers were largely unaffected by hospital location or years of experience.Conclusion. Australasian cancer nurses have favourable attitudes towards promoting healthy eating to their cancer patients across multiple treatment stages and believe that healthy eating has many benefits for their patients. Unfortunately, several barriers to healthy eating promotion were reported. If these barriers can be overcome, nurses may be able to work more effectively with dieticians to improve the outcomes for cancer patients.https://peerj.com/articles/1396.pdfCancer nursesHealth professionalNutritionCancer patientsHealthy eatingOncology
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Petra G. Puhringer
Alicia Olsen
Mike Climstein
Sally Sargeant
Lynnette M. Jones
Justin W.L. Keogh
spellingShingle Petra G. Puhringer
Alicia Olsen
Mike Climstein
Sally Sargeant
Lynnette M. Jones
Justin W.L. Keogh
Current nutrition promotion, beliefs and barriers among cancer nurses in Australia and New Zealand
PeerJ
Cancer nurses
Health professional
Nutrition
Cancer patients
Healthy eating
Oncology
author_facet Petra G. Puhringer
Alicia Olsen
Mike Climstein
Sally Sargeant
Lynnette M. Jones
Justin W.L. Keogh
author_sort Petra G. Puhringer
title Current nutrition promotion, beliefs and barriers among cancer nurses in Australia and New Zealand
title_short Current nutrition promotion, beliefs and barriers among cancer nurses in Australia and New Zealand
title_full Current nutrition promotion, beliefs and barriers among cancer nurses in Australia and New Zealand
title_fullStr Current nutrition promotion, beliefs and barriers among cancer nurses in Australia and New Zealand
title_full_unstemmed Current nutrition promotion, beliefs and barriers among cancer nurses in Australia and New Zealand
title_sort current nutrition promotion, beliefs and barriers among cancer nurses in australia and new zealand
publisher PeerJ Inc.
series PeerJ
issn 2167-8359
publishDate 2015-11-01
description Rationale. Many cancer patients and survivors do not meet nutritional and physical activity guidelines, thus healthier eating and greater levels of physical activity could have considerable benefits for these individuals. While research has investigated cancer survivors’ perspective on their challenges in meeting the nutrition and physical guidelines, little research has examined how health professionals may assist their patients meet these guidelines. Cancer nurses are ideally placed to promote healthy behaviours to their patients, especially if access to dieticians or dietary resources is limited. However, little is known about cancer nurses’ healthy eating promotion practices to their patients. The primary aim of this study was to examine current healthy eating promotion practices, beliefs and barriers of cancer nurses in Australia and New Zealand. A secondary aim was to gain insight into whether these practices, beliefs and barriers were influenced by the nurses’ hospital or years of work experience.Patients and Methods. An online questionnaire was used to obtain data. Sub-group cancer nurse comparisons were performed on hospital location (metropolitan vs regional and rural) and years of experience (<25 or ≥25 years) using ANOVA and chi square analysis for continuous and categorical data respectively.Results. A total of 123 Australasian cancer nurses responded to the survey. Cancer nurses believed they were often the major provider of nutritional advice to their cancer patients (32.5%), a value marginally less than dieticians (35.9%) but substantially higher than oncologists (3.3%). The majority promoted healthy eating prior (62.6%), during (74.8%) and post treatment (64.2%). Most cancer nurses felt that healthy eating had positive effects on the cancer patients’ quality of life (85.4%), weight management (82.9%), mental health (80.5%), activities of daily living (79.7%) and risk of other chronic diseases (79.7%), although only 75.5% agreed or strongly agreed that this is due to a strong evidence base. Lack of time (25.8%), adequate support structures (17.3%) nutrition expertise (12.2%) were cited by the cancer nurses as the most common barriers to promoting healthy eating to their patients. Comparisons based on their hospital location and years of experience, revealed very few significant differences, indicating that cancer nurses’ healthy eating promotion practices, beliefs and barriers were largely unaffected by hospital location or years of experience.Conclusion. Australasian cancer nurses have favourable attitudes towards promoting healthy eating to their cancer patients across multiple treatment stages and believe that healthy eating has many benefits for their patients. Unfortunately, several barriers to healthy eating promotion were reported. If these barriers can be overcome, nurses may be able to work more effectively with dieticians to improve the outcomes for cancer patients.
topic Cancer nurses
Health professional
Nutrition
Cancer patients
Healthy eating
Oncology
url https://peerj.com/articles/1396.pdf
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