European Journal of Oncology Nursing
Volume 13, Issue 1 , Pages 22-28, February 2009

To be involved or not: Factors that influence nurses' involvement in providing treatment decisional support in advanced cancer

  • Christine Barthow

      Affiliations

    • Graduate School of Nursing, Midwifery and Health, Victoria University of Wellington, PO Box 600, Wellington 6140, New Zealand
  • ,
  • Cheryle Moss

      Affiliations

    • Graduate School of Nursing, Midwifery and Health, Victoria University of Wellington, PO Box 600, Wellington 6140, New Zealand
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Monash University, Faculty of Medicine, Nursing and Health Sciences, Victoria 3800, Australia. Tel.: +61 3 9904 4639; fax: + 61 3 99044655.
  • ,
  • Eileen McKinlay

      Affiliations

    • School of Medicine and Health Sciences, Otago University, PO Box 7343, Wellington 6242, New Zealand
  • ,
  • Leslie McCullough

      Affiliations

    • Wellington Hospital, Capital and Coast District Health Board, Private Bag 7902, Wellington South, Wellington 6242, New Zealand
  • ,
  • Debbie Wise

      Affiliations

    • Mary Potter Hospice, PO Box 7442, Wellington South, Wellington 6242, New Zealand
    • Present address: Community Health, Hutt Valley DHB, Private Bag 31907, Lower Hutt 5040, New Zealand.

published online 17 November 2008.

Abstract 

Decisional support is a multifaceted process of facilitating patients' decision making regarding treatment choices. Effective decisional support practices of nurses in relation to the use of anticancer therapies in patients with advanced disease are central to quality cancer care. A recent qualitative descriptive study (n=21) exploring the decision making practices of doctors and nurses in one tertiary cancer centre in New Zealand identified many complexities associated with nurses and their participation in decisional support. The study revealed that cancer nurses had varied opinions about the meaning and importance of their roles in treatment related decision making. This variation was significant and led the researchers to undertake a detailed secondary exploration of factors that impacted on the nurses' involvement in the provision of decisional support. Four key groups of factors were identified. These were factors relating to degree of knowledge, level of experience, beliefs and understandings about nursing roles and cancer therapies, and structural interfaces in the work setting. Understanding these factors is important because it allows modification of the conditions which impact on the ability to provide effective decisional care. It also provides some understanding of clinical drivers associated with nurses' decisional support work with patients who have advanced cancer.

Keywords: Advanced cancer, Decisional support, Interdisciplinary, Nursing involvement, Nursing role, Qualitative research, Treatment decision making

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PII: S1462-3889(08)00127-0

doi:10.1016/j.ejon.2008.09.004

European Journal of Oncology Nursing
Volume 13, Issue 1 , Pages 22-28, February 2009