Prechemotherapy Education: Reducing Patient Anxiety Through Nurse-Led Teaching Sessions

Emmanuel Apor, MD; Nathan T. Connell, MD, MPH; Katherine Faricy-Anderson, MD, MPH; Peter Barth, MD; Rouba Youssef, PhD; Mary Anne Fenton, MD, FACP; William M. Sikov, MD, FACP, FNCBC; Anthony Thomas, DO; Kayla Rosati, EdM, CCRP; Andrew Schumacher, MSCHE, CCRP; Alise Lombardo, BS, CCRP; Susan Korber, MS, RN, OCN, NE-BC; Humera Khurshid, MD; Howard Safran, MD; Anthony Mega, MD
CJON
10.1188/18.CJON.76-82

Description

Background: Patients with cancer experience stress surrounding diagnosis and treatment. Many cancer centers employ a nurse-led education session to alleviate patient anxiety and confusion.


Objectives: The goal was to evaluate the effect of a nurse-led chemotherapy teaching session on patients’ knowledge, anxiety, and preparedness for 
cancer-directed therapy.


Methods: After discussing treatment with their oncologist, participants completed a survey assessing their perceived understanding of various treatment topics. After, they underwent a teaching session with an oncology nurse. The survey was readministered when patients returned for their first and second treatment cycles.


Findings: Significant increases were observed in patients’ understanding of their treatment schedule, potential adverse effects, and antiemetic medication regimen by the first cycle of therapy and a reduction in treatment-related anxiety by the second cycle of therapy.

View Article @ cjon.ons.org

ONS Voice Articles

ONS's member magazine articles.

View All Voice Articles

Related Topics