User-Centered Development and Patient Acceptability Testing of a Health-Coaching Intervention to Enhance Cancer Survivorship Follow-up in Primary Care.
Denalee M O'MalleyStacy N DavisRahwana AmareBianca SanabriaBrittany SullivanKatie A DevineJeanne M FerrantePatricia A FindleySuzanne M MillerShawna V HudsonPublished in: Journal of cancer education : the official journal of the American Association for Cancer Education (2020)
We describe an iterative three-phase approach used to develop a cancer survivorship health-coaching intervention to guide self-management and follow-up care for post-treatment breast, colorectal, and prostate cancer survivors. Informed by theory (e.g., Cognitive-Social Health Information Processing Model (C-SHIP)), relevant literature, and clinical guidelines, we engaged in a user-centered design process. In phase I, we conducted depth interviews with survivors of breast (n = 34), prostate (n = 4), and colorectal (n = 6) cancers to develop a health coaching prototype. In phase II, we utilized user-testing interviews (n = 9) to test and refine the health coaching prototype. For both phases, we used a template analysis independently coding each interview. In phase I, majority (n = 34, 81%) of survivors were positive about the utility of health coaching. Among these survivors (n = 34), the top areas of identified need were emotional support (44%), general health information (35.3%), changes in diet and exercise (29.3%), accountability and motivation (23.5%), and information about treatment effects (17.7%). The prototype was developed and user-tested and refined in phase III to address the following concerns: (1) the amount of time for calls, (2) density of reading materials, (3) clarity about health coaches' role, (4) customization. Collectively, this resulted in the development of the Extended Cancer Educational for Long-Term Cancer Survivors health-coaching (EXCELSHC) program, which represents the first cancer survivorship follow-up program to support follow-up care designed-for-dissemination in primary care settings. EXCELSHC is being tested in a clinical efficacy trial. Future research will focus on program refinement and testing for effectiveness in primary care.
Keyphrases
- health information
- healthcare
- primary care
- public health
- mental health
- social media
- phase iii
- phase ii
- childhood cancer
- papillary thyroid
- randomized controlled trial
- clinical trial
- young adults
- prostate cancer
- quality improvement
- systematic review
- open label
- squamous cell
- palliative care
- magnetic resonance imaging
- squamous cell carcinoma
- health promotion
- magnetic resonance
- lymph node metastasis
- clinical practice
- chronic pain
- human health
- current status