This prospective longitudinal study aimed to describe the trajectories of HRQoL, health literacy, and self-efficacy in patients with esophageal cancer, which have been thus far poorly described. Data were collected at baseline (preoperative phase) and in the postoperative period (two weeks, and one, two, and three months after esophagectomy). The study hypothesis was that health literacy and self-efficacy might predict better health status and quality of life over time. Forty-five patients were enrolled between 2018 and 2019. HRQoL, health literacy, and self-efficacy were assessed using validated scales. The ability to analyze information to exert greater control over life events critically (critical health literacy) (η2p = 0.660) and the individual’s confidence in dealing with challenging tasks (self-efficacy) (η2p = 0.501) strongly predicted the scores of gene- ral health status over time. Overall, the functional status improved at 3 months after surgery, and this trend paralleled the decline of cancer-specific and surgery-related symptoms. In conclusion, researchers and clinicians should pay greater attention to optimizing baseline health literacy and self-efficacy levels. Future educational and motivational interventions should be fur- ther tested and possibly integrated into the prehabilitation programs.

Trajectories of Health-Related Quality of Life, Health Literacy, and Self-Efficacy in Curatively-Treated Patients with Esophageal Cancer: A Longitudinal Single-Center Study in Italy / A. Magon, R. Caruso, S. Mirabella, F. Dellafiore, C. Arrigoni, L. Bonavina, A. Sironi. - In: JOURNAL OF PATIENT EXPERIENCE. - ISSN 2374-3743. - 8:(2021), pp. 1-10. [10.1177/23743735211060769]

Trajectories of Health-Related Quality of Life, Health Literacy, and Self-Efficacy in Curatively-Treated Patients with Esophageal Cancer: A Longitudinal Single-Center Study in Italy

R. Caruso
Secondo
Methodology
;
L. Bonavina
Ultimo
Supervision
;
A. Sironi
2021

Abstract

This prospective longitudinal study aimed to describe the trajectories of HRQoL, health literacy, and self-efficacy in patients with esophageal cancer, which have been thus far poorly described. Data were collected at baseline (preoperative phase) and in the postoperative period (two weeks, and one, two, and three months after esophagectomy). The study hypothesis was that health literacy and self-efficacy might predict better health status and quality of life over time. Forty-five patients were enrolled between 2018 and 2019. HRQoL, health literacy, and self-efficacy were assessed using validated scales. The ability to analyze information to exert greater control over life events critically (critical health literacy) (η2p = 0.660) and the individual’s confidence in dealing with challenging tasks (self-efficacy) (η2p = 0.501) strongly predicted the scores of gene- ral health status over time. Overall, the functional status improved at 3 months after surgery, and this trend paralleled the decline of cancer-specific and surgery-related symptoms. In conclusion, researchers and clinicians should pay greater attention to optimizing baseline health literacy and self-efficacy levels. Future educational and motivational interventions should be fur- ther tested and possibly integrated into the prehabilitation programs.
cancer; education; esophageal cancer; esophagectomy; health literacy; neo-adjuvant therapy; patient-reported outcome; prehabilitation; quality of life; self-efficacy
Settore MED/45 - Scienze Infermieristiche Generali, Cliniche e Pediatriche
Settore MED/18 - Chirurgia Generale
2021
Article (author)
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/924210
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