Do qualitative interviews cause distress in adolescents and young adults asked to discuss fears of cancer recurrence?

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Title: Do qualitative interviews cause distress in adolescents and young adults asked to discuss fears of cancer recurrence?
Authors: Heathcote, Lauren C. (AUTHOR), Loecher, Nele (AUTHOR), Spunt, Sheri L. (AUTHOR), Simon, Pamela (AUTHOR), Tutelman, Perri R. (AUTHOR), Wakefield, Claire E. (AUTHOR), Ach, Emily (AUTHOR), Schapira, Lidia (AUTHOR)
Source: Psycho-Oncology. Jan2021, Vol. 30 Issue 1, p123-126. 4p. 1 Chart, 1 Graph.
Subjects: Young adults, Cancer relapse, Psycho-oncology, Worry, Oncologists, Teenagers, Psychological distress, Institutional review boards
Abstract: Keywords: adolescent and young adult; cancer survivor; distress screening; fear of cancer recurrence; psycho-oncology; qualitative; semi-structured interview EN adolescent and young adult cancer survivor distress screening fear of cancer recurrence psycho-oncology qualitative semi-structured interview 123 126 4 01/28/21 20210101 NES 210101 BACKGROUND Fear of cancer recurrence (FCR), defined as "fear, worry or concern relating to the possibility that cancer will come back or progress,"1 is emerging as a primary survivorship issue. Qualitative research interviews could be a useful method for conducting FCR research that is both theory-advancing and patient-centered, however given observed individual variability in distress ratings it will be valuable to implement distress screening protocols in such studies going forward. [Extracted from the article]
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Database: Psychology and Behavioral Sciences Collection
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Abstract:Keywords: adolescent and young adult; cancer survivor; distress screening; fear of cancer recurrence; psycho-oncology; qualitative; semi-structured interview EN adolescent and young adult cancer survivor distress screening fear of cancer recurrence psycho-oncology qualitative semi-structured interview 123 126 4 01/28/21 20210101 NES 210101 BACKGROUND Fear of cancer recurrence (FCR), defined as "fear, worry or concern relating to the possibility that cancer will come back or progress,"1 is emerging as a primary survivorship issue. Qualitative research interviews could be a useful method for conducting FCR research that is both theory-advancing and patient-centered, however given observed individual variability in distress ratings it will be valuable to implement distress screening protocols in such studies going forward. [Extracted from the article]
ISSN:10579249
DOI:10.1002/pon.5544