Abstract 5314
Background
Spiritual distress is prevalent in advanced disease, but often neglected, resulting in unnecessary suffering. Religion and/or spirituality have increasingly been recognized as key elements in patients’ experience of advanced illness. This study aims to explore spiritual care needs, experiences, preferences and examine the association between religious coping and quality of life among patients with advanced cancer.
Methods
Structured interviews were conducted with 135 patients in advanced cancer patients and their primary informal caregivers. Patients completed measures of QOL (McGill QOL questionnaire), religious coping (Brief Measure of Religious Coping [RCOPE] and Multidimensional Measure of Religion/ Spirituality), self-efficacy (General Self-Efficacy Scale), and sociodemographic variables. Both positive and negative religious coping and multiple dimensions of QOL (physical, physical symptom, psychological, existential, and support) were studied.
Results
The median age of the population was 60.2 years and majority of the subjects were Hindus. The study revealed greater use of positive religious coping was associated with better overall QOL as well as higher scores on the existential and support QOL dimensions and was also related to more physical symptoms. However, greater use of negative religious coping was related to poorer overall QOL. Most patients believed it was important for health care professionals to consider patient spiritual concerns within the medical setting. Spiritual care was reportedly lacking, primarily due to staff members’ de-prioritisation and lack of time.
Conclusions
This study demonstrates that spiritual concerns are common among advanced cancer patients, and that they are associated with poorer psychological well-being. Spiritual care is an essential but neglected component of care, according to patients and their caregivers across a range of countries. The findings of the present study support the relationship between spirituality and health outcomes.
Clinical trial identification
Editorial acknowledgement
Legal entity responsible for the study
Vibhay Pareek.
Funding
Has not received any funding.
Disclosure
All authors have declared no conflicts of interest.
Resources from the same session
5037 - CXCR4, CCR2 and CCR5 expression in subsets of tumor cells with stem and/or EMT features
Presenter: Olga Savelieva
Session: Poster Display session 1
Resources:
Abstract
5729 - Expression of mutant p53 affects cancer cell sensitivity to topotecan
Presenter: Rimma Mingaleeva
Session: Poster Display session 1
Resources:
Abstract
5725 - Breast cancer organoids a new tool for the prediction of drugs penetration and patient’outcome
Presenter: Giuseppina Roscigno
Session: Poster Display session 1
Resources:
Abstract
5680 - Aptamer-mediated exosomes detection for early breast cancer identification.
Presenter: Cristina Quintavalle
Session: Poster Display session 1
Resources:
Abstract
2460 - MicroRNA-181c promotes tamoxifen resistance in breast cancer cells via upregulation Akt/mTOR axis
Presenter: Alexander Scherbakov
Session: Poster Display session 1
Resources:
Abstract
3751 - Spatio-temporal separation of tumor infiltrating CD8+ T-cells and HER2/neu+ tumor cells in tumor-immune milieu of infiltrating ductal carcinoma of the breast
Presenter: Sandhya Sreedharan
Session: Poster Display session 1
Resources:
Abstract
4664 - Large genomic rearrangements in BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes in the Portuguese population.
Presenter: Joao Pinto
Session: Poster Display session 1
Resources:
Abstract
4611 - Non-BRCA1/2 hereditary breast and ovarian cancer: findings from a multidisciplinary program
Presenter: Ana Monteiro
Session: Poster Display session 1
Resources:
Abstract
5340 - Quantitative imaging and characterization of collagen patterns in high grade serous ovarian carcinoma (HGSOC)
Presenter: Ruby Huang
Session: Poster Display session 1
Resources:
Abstract
4209 - Semiquantitative assessment of vimentin expression in prostate cancer (PC)
Presenter: Marina Puchinskaya
Session: Poster Display session 1
Resources:
Abstract