Developing a Peer-to-Peer mHealth Application to Connect Hispanic Cancer Patients

被引:0
|
作者
Jennifer R. Banas
David Victorson
Sandra Gutierrez
Evelyn Cordero
Judy Guitleman
Niina Haas
机构
[1] Northeastern Illinois University,Department of Health, Physical Education, Recreation, and Athletics
[2] Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine,Department of Medical Social Sciences
[3] ALAS-WINGS Latina Cancer Support Organization,undefined
[4] Bright Outcome,undefined
来源
Journal of Cancer Education | 2017年 / 32卷
关键词
Cancer; Hispanic; mHealth; Social media; Social capital theory;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Cancer and its treatment can significantly impact health-related quality of life (HRQOL) (J Pain Symptom Manag 9 (3):186–192, 1994; Soc Sci Med 46:1569–1584, 1998), particularly for Hispanics (Healthcare Financ Rev 29 (4):23–40, 2008; Psycho-Oncology 21 (2):115–124, 2012). Moreover, providers of cancer support for this population may encounter unique challenges. Grounded in social capital theory, this study identified Spanish-speaking, Hispanic breast cancer survivor support needs and preferences for a mHealth intervention. A user-centered, community-engaged research design was employed, consisting of focus groups made up of constituents from a local Hispanic-serving, cancer support organization. Focus group audio-recordings, translated into English, were coded using a grounded theory analytic approach. First, lead researchers read the complete transcripts to obtain a general sense of the discussion. Next, coding rules were established (e.g., code at the most granular level; double and triple code if necessary, code exhaustively) and initial codebook was created through open-coding. Three new coders were trained to establish requisite kappa statistic levels (≥.70) for inter-rater reliability. With training and discussion, kappa estimates reached .81–.88. Focus group (n = 31) results revealed a mHealth intervention targeting Hispanic cancer patients should not only offer information and support on disease/treatment effects but also respond to the individual’s HRQOL, particularly emotional and social challenges. Specifically, participants expressed a strong desire for Spanish content and to connect with others who had gone through a similar experience. Overall, participants indicated they would have access to and would use such an intervention. Findings indicate positive support for a mHealth tool, which is culturally tailored to Spanish speakers, is available in Spanish, and connects cancer patients with survivors.
引用
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页码:158 / 165
页数:7
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