Abstract
Purpose: To evaluate the effectiveness of a strenghts-oriented therapeutic conversation intervention on confidence about how illness beliefs affect sexuality and intimacy and on perceived relationship quality among women in active cancer treatment and their partners. Methods: A quasi-experimental single-group pre-post-follow-up design was used. Women in active cancer treatment and their intimate partners were randomly assigned to a nurse-managed couple-based intervention (experimental group, n = 30 couples) or wait-list (delayed intervention) control group (n = 27 couples) plus 4 additional couples who pilot tested feasibility of the intervention, prior to the RCT. However, baseline differences in demographic and clinical variables prevented comparisons between groups. Therefore, a repeated-one-group pre-post test setup was used, comparing women with cancer and their partners over three time points. The intervention consisted of three Couple-Strengths-Oriented Therapeutic Conversations (CO-SOTC) sessions. The participants also had access to web-based evidence-based educational information. Data were collected before intervention (T1, baseline), one to two weeks post-intervention (T2), and after a follow-up session at three months (T3). Data from 60 couples (N = 120) were analyzed. Results: Significant differences were observed, for both women and intimate partners, over time in more confidence about how illness beliefs affected sexuality and intimacy (T1 versus T2, and T1 versus T3), and increased overall quality of the relationship (T1 versus T2, and T1 versus T3). No differences were found between dyad members’ scores on illness beliefs or relationship quality at any time point. Conclusions: The CO-SOTC intervention was effective in supporting sexual adjustment among women in cancer treatment and their intimate partners. Trial registration number: NCT03936400 at clinicaltrials.gov.
Original language | English |
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Article number | 101975 |
Pages (from-to) | 101975 |
Journal | European Journal of Oncology Nursing |
Volume | 52 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - Jun 2021 |
Bibliographical note
This study was supported by grants from the following institutions: Research Fund of Ingibjorg R. Magnusdottir, the Icelandic Nurses' Association Scientific Fund, the Landspitali University Hospital Scientific Fund and the Scientific Fund of the Icelandic Cancer Society.This work was supported by a project grant from the Icelandic Research Fund, 2019-196218-051. We thank the Icelandic Directorate of Health and the IMBR for providing the data.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021
Other keywords
- Advanced practice nursing
- Couples therapy
- Neoplasms
- Psychosocial support systems
- Sexual health
- Sexuality
- Spouses
- Women
- Sexual Behavior
- Humans
- Neoplasms/therapy
- Female
- Sexual Partners
- Interpersonal Relations