The main purpose of the present study was to understand the subjective experience of patients adjusting to cancer by focusing on how that experience might be affected by participating in a psychodramatic group intervention. In-depth interviews using an interpretative-phenomenological approach were conducted with eight cancer patients involved in a psychodrama group. Four key themes were identified: (1) outside and inside relationships; (2) identities: nurturing other selves; (3) a feelings' gym: performing the internal world; and (4) many ends: mourning death and dying. Participation in cancer group using a psychodramatic approach provided positive results. In detail, the group setting: (1) favoured relationships in which it was possible to freely express oneself and (2) empowered patients in their feelings of being able to give and receive help; the psychodramatic approach: (1) supported the physical mobilisation of sense of agency and (2) permitted to deal with the grieving process. Cancer healthcare pathways would benefit from psychotherapeutic programmes using a similar approach, since psychodrama by actively involving body seems to works on areas that are often underwhelmed by other approaches, such as (i.e., physical mobilisation, body engagement, grieving adjustment). Psychodrama supports patients to achieve insights into their own possibilities to actively participate in their own life situations despite having cancer and undergoing treatment for it.

Adjustment to cancer: exploring patients' experiences of participating in a psychodramatic group intervention / J. Menichetti, L. Giusti, I. Fossati, E. Vegni. - In: EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF CANCER CARE. - ISSN 0961-5423. - 25:5(2015 Oct 29), pp. 903-915.

Adjustment to cancer: exploring patients' experiences of participating in a psychodramatic group intervention

E. Vegni
Ultimo
2015

Abstract

The main purpose of the present study was to understand the subjective experience of patients adjusting to cancer by focusing on how that experience might be affected by participating in a psychodramatic group intervention. In-depth interviews using an interpretative-phenomenological approach were conducted with eight cancer patients involved in a psychodrama group. Four key themes were identified: (1) outside and inside relationships; (2) identities: nurturing other selves; (3) a feelings' gym: performing the internal world; and (4) many ends: mourning death and dying. Participation in cancer group using a psychodramatic approach provided positive results. In detail, the group setting: (1) favoured relationships in which it was possible to freely express oneself and (2) empowered patients in their feelings of being able to give and receive help; the psychodramatic approach: (1) supported the physical mobilisation of sense of agency and (2) permitted to deal with the grieving process. Cancer healthcare pathways would benefit from psychotherapeutic programmes using a similar approach, since psychodrama by actively involving body seems to works on areas that are often underwhelmed by other approaches, such as (i.e., physical mobilisation, body engagement, grieving adjustment). Psychodrama supports patients to achieve insights into their own possibilities to actively participate in their own life situations despite having cancer and undergoing treatment for it.
cancer; group therapy; IPA; oncology; psychodrama; qualitative study; Aged; Attitude to Health; Female; Humans; Interpersonal Relations; Male; Middle Aged; Neoplasms; Patient Acceptance of Health Care; Psychotherapy, Group; Self Concept; Adaptation, Psychological; Psychodrama; Oncology
Settore M-PSI/08 - Psicologia Clinica
Settore MED/06 - Oncologia Medica
29-ott-2015
http://www.blackwellpublishing.com/journals/ecc/
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/503334
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