Abstract
Abstract
Objectives
Gastric cancer patients undergoing total gastrectomy face nutrition-related complications and worsening quality of life after surgery. In this context, gastrectomized cancer patients are required to cope with new conditions. Little is known about their accommodating feeding to the new life condition as a negotiated process among stakeholders in real contexts. This study aimed to investigate the shaping of this process as influenced by the perspectives of patients, health-care professionals (HPs), and caregivers (CGs).
Methods
A constructivist grounded theory study, through semi-structured interviews and interpretative coding, was designed to answer the following research question: “what is the process of returning to eating and feeding after a gastrectomy?”
Results
The final sample included 18 participants. “Defining a balance by compromising with fear” is the core category explaining returning to eating as a process negotiated by all actors involved, with patients trying to find a feeding balance through a multi-layer compromise: with the information received by HPs, the proprioception drastically altered by gastric resection, new dietary habits to accept, and complex and often minimized conviviality. This process involves 4 main conceptual phases: relying on the doctors’ advice, perceptive realignment, rearranging food intake, and food-regulated social interaction. Those categories are also shaped by the fear of being unwell from eating and the constant fear of tumor relapse.
Significance of results
Multiple actors can meet patients’ and their CGs’ nutritional, care, and psychosocial needs. A multidisciplinary approach involving nutritionists, psychologists, occupational therapists, social workers, and anthropologists can be key to effectively managing these patients’ survivorship care. We suggest training all the professionals on the first level of nutritional counseling.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)