Kinesiophobia as a Barrier to Symptom Management Using Physical Activity When undergoing Cancer Therapy: A Preparatory Study Describing Patients' Experiences With the New Instrument Tampa-Scale for Kinesiophobia-Symptoms and Interviews.

IF 2.8 3区 医学 Q2 INTEGRATIVE & COMPLEMENTARY MEDICINE Integrative Cancer Therapies Pub Date : 2024-01-01 DOI:10.1177/15347354241303454
Tove Bylund-Grenklo, Anna Efverman
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Abstract

Background: Cancer care professionals need to be aware of kinesiophobia, fear of motion, in patients undergoing cancer therapy. The new instrument the Tampa-Scale Kinesiophobia Symptoms (TSK-Symptoms) aims to measure fear and avoidance of motion in relation to multiple symptoms (eg, nausea, fatigue, anxiety, pain). It is modified from the TSK, which relates solely to pain. Aim: To test the feasibility of the TSK-Symptoms, to quantify kinesiophobia in patients with cancer, to study whether kinesiophobia was associated with symptoms or physical activity, and through interviews to gain a deeper understanding of patient experiences. Methods: In this preparatory longitudinal study, patients (n = 55, mean age 68 years; 51% men; 38% had prostate cancer, 23% breast cancer) undergoing radiotherapy provided questionnaire data on kinesiophobia using the new instrument TSK-Symptoms, symptoms and physical activity twice (at baseline, T1, and 1 week later, T2). Eight patients were interviewed. Results: At T1 and T2, 4 of 54 (7%) and 8 of 55 patients (14%) reported kinesiophobia (P = .009). From T1 to T2, occurrence of nausea increased. Of the 16 nauseated patients at T2, 6 (38%) reported kinesiophobia compared to 2 (5%) of the 39 nausea-free patients (P = .005). Patients who reported kinesiophobia practiced less physical activity (median 0 days at moderate intensity at T1 (P < .001), median 2 days at moderate intensity at T2, P = .006) compared to patients free from kinesiophobia (median 4 and 5 days). Three qualitative content analysis categories described patient experiences: (1) "Struggling to stay physically active in an extraordinary situation associated with burdensome symptoms," (2) "Feeling damaged and at the same time grateful," and (3) "Needing support due to fear of motion and of worsened condition." Conclusions: This preparatory study showed that the new instrument the TSK-Symptoms was feasible for use in patients undergoing cancer therapy to quantify kinesiophobia, which was present in approximately 1 in 10 patients. Kinesiophobia was more common in patients with nausea, and patients reporting kinesiophobia practiced less physical activity. Patients highlighted a need for support. The psychometric properties of the TSK-Symptoms, completed on several languages, need to be evaluated. Cancer care professionals may quantify kinesiophobia using the TSK-Symptoms instrument and give kinesiophobic patients support.

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在接受癌症治疗时,运动恐惧症是使用身体活动来控制症状的障碍:一项描述患者使用新仪器坦帕-运动恐惧症-症状和访谈的经验的预备研究。
背景:癌症护理专业人员需要意识到运动恐惧症,害怕运动,在接受癌症治疗的患者。新的坦帕量表运动恐惧症症状(tsk -症状)旨在测量与多种症状(如恶心、疲劳、焦虑、疼痛)相关的恐惧和回避运动。它是由TSK改进而来的,后者只与疼痛有关。目的:验证TSK-Symptoms的可行性,量化癌症患者的运动恐惧症,研究运动恐惧症是否与症状或身体活动相关,并通过访谈加深对患者经历的了解。方法:在本前瞻性纵向研究中,55例患者(n = 55,平均年龄68岁;男性51%;接受放射治疗的38%患有前列腺癌,23%患有乳腺癌)使用新仪器tsk -症状,症状和身体活动两次(基线T1和1周后T2)提供运动恐惧症问卷数据。对8名患者进行了访谈。结果:在T1和T2时,54例患者中有4例(7%)和55例患者中有8例(14%)报告运动恐惧症(P = 0.009)。从T1到T2,恶心发生率增加。在16例T2恶心患者中,6例(38%)报告了运动恐惧症,而39例无恶心患者中有2例(5%)报告了运动恐惧症(P = 0.005)。与无运动恐惧症患者(中位4天和5天)相比,报告运动恐惧症的患者在T1时进行的体力活动较少(中位0天,中等强度(P P = 0.006)。三个定性内容分析类别描述了患者的经历:(1)“在与繁重症状相关的特殊情况下努力保持身体活动”;(2)“感觉受到伤害,同时心怀感激”;(3)“由于害怕运动和病情恶化而需要支持”。结论:这项预备研究表明,新仪器tsk -症状是可行的,用于接受癌症治疗的患者量化运动恐惧症,这存在于大约1 / 10的患者中。运动恐惧症在恶心患者中更常见,报告运动恐惧症的患者锻炼较少。患者强调需要支持。需要评估以几种语言完成的tsk -症状的心理测量特性。癌症护理专业人员可以使用tsk -症状工具量化运动恐惧症,并给予运动恐惧症患者支持。
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来源期刊
Integrative Cancer Therapies
Integrative Cancer Therapies 医学-全科医学与补充医学
CiteScore
4.80
自引率
3.40%
发文量
78
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: ICT is the first journal to spearhead and focus on a new and growing movement in cancer treatment. The journal emphasizes scientific understanding of alternative medicine and traditional medicine therapies, and their responsible integration with conventional health care. Integrative care includes therapeutic interventions in diet, lifestyle, exercise, stress care, and nutritional supplements, as well as experimental vaccines, chrono-chemotherapy, and other advanced treatments. Contributors are leading oncologists, researchers, nurses, and health-care professionals.
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