The experience of a program combining two complementary therapies for women with breast cancer: An IPSE qualitative study.
Jordan SibeoniEmilie ManoliosJeanne MathéValérie FekaMarie-Madeleine VinezEvelyne Lonsdorfer-WolfJean-Gérard BlochFranck BayléJean-Pierre MeunierAnne Revah-LevyLaurence VerneuilPublished in: PloS one (2023)
Our results from this French study reinforce the data described in other western countries about the needs of women receiving care in oncology departments for breast cancer: they need to be informed of the existence of supportive care in cancer by the health-care professionals themselves, to be listened to, and to receive support care. A systematic work of reflexivity about this redundancy in our results and in the qualitative literature, led us to question what impeded the exploration of more complex aspects of the experience of this women-the inherently emotional and anxiety-inducing experience of cancer, especially anxiety about its recurrence and of death-and to suggest new research perspectives to overcome these methodological and theoretical obstacles.