TY - JOUR
T1 - 'It's communication between people who are going through the same thing'
T2 - experiences of informal interactions in hospital cancer treatment settings
AU - P Grant, Matthew
AU - A M Philip, Jennifer
AU - Deliens, Luc
AU - Komesaroff, Paul A
N1 - Funding Information:
Open Access funding enabled and organized by CAUL and its Member Institutions This work was funded through a NHMRC postgraduate scholarship (APP1150989) and funding from the RACGP Foundation and Primary Care Collaboration Cancer Clinical Trials Group (PC417 56250).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2023, The Author(s).
PY - 2023/7/3
Y1 - 2023/7/3
N2 - PURPOSE: In hospital settings, patients, visitors, and staff engage in many interactions outside formal clinical encounters. Whilst many of these may be inconsequential, others contribute significantly to how patients and their carers experience cancer and its treatment. This article aims to explore the experiences and significance of interactions that occur outside formal clinical encounters in hospital cancer treatment settings.METHODS: Semi-structured interviews were conducted with cancer patients, carers, and staff recruited from two hospital sites and cancer support groups. Hermeneutic phenomenology informed lines of questioning and data analysis.RESULTS: Thirty-one people participated in the study: 18 cancer patients, four carers, and nine staff members. The experiences of informal interactions were grouped into three themes: connecting, making sense, and enacting care. The participants described how these encounters allowed connection with others in the hospital spaces, facilitating a sense of belonging, normality, and self-worth. Through these interactions, individuals participated in making sense of their experiences, to better anticipate the decisions and challenges that might lie ahead. By connecting with other individuals, they cared for others and felt cared for themselves, and were able to learn from, teach, and support each other.CONCLUSIONS: Outside the confines of the clinical discourses participants negotiate terms of engagement, sharing of information, expertise, and their own personal stories that they may employ to contribute to the individuals around them. These interactions occur within a loose and evolving framework of social interactions, an 'informal community', in which cancer patients, carers, and staff members play active and meaningful roles.
AB - PURPOSE: In hospital settings, patients, visitors, and staff engage in many interactions outside formal clinical encounters. Whilst many of these may be inconsequential, others contribute significantly to how patients and their carers experience cancer and its treatment. This article aims to explore the experiences and significance of interactions that occur outside formal clinical encounters in hospital cancer treatment settings.METHODS: Semi-structured interviews were conducted with cancer patients, carers, and staff recruited from two hospital sites and cancer support groups. Hermeneutic phenomenology informed lines of questioning and data analysis.RESULTS: Thirty-one people participated in the study: 18 cancer patients, four carers, and nine staff members. The experiences of informal interactions were grouped into three themes: connecting, making sense, and enacting care. The participants described how these encounters allowed connection with others in the hospital spaces, facilitating a sense of belonging, normality, and self-worth. Through these interactions, individuals participated in making sense of their experiences, to better anticipate the decisions and challenges that might lie ahead. By connecting with other individuals, they cared for others and felt cared for themselves, and were able to learn from, teach, and support each other.CONCLUSIONS: Outside the confines of the clinical discourses participants negotiate terms of engagement, sharing of information, expertise, and their own personal stories that they may employ to contribute to the individuals around them. These interactions occur within a loose and evolving framework of social interactions, an 'informal community', in which cancer patients, carers, and staff members play active and meaningful roles.
KW - Cancer treatment
KW - Communication
KW - Informal interactions
KW - Palliative care
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85163807647
U2 - 10.1007/s00520-023-07900-6
DO - 10.1007/s00520-023-07900-6
M3 - Article
C2 - 37395843
SN - 0941-4355
VL - 31
JO - Supportive Care in Cancer
JF - Supportive Care in Cancer
IS - 7
M1 - 440
ER -