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Accepted for/Published in: JMIR Cancer

Date Submitted: May 3, 2017
Open Peer Review Period: May 3, 2017 - Jul 6, 2017
Date Accepted: Sep 22, 2017
(closed for review but you can still tweet)

The final, peer-reviewed published version of this preprint can be found here:

Demands and Needs for Psycho-Oncological eHealth Interventions in Women With Cancer: Cross-Sectional Study

Ringwald J, Marwedel L, Junne F, Ziser K, Schäffeler N, Gerstner L, Wallwiener M, Brucker SY, Hautzinger M, Zipfel S, Teufel M

Demands and Needs for Psycho-Oncological eHealth Interventions in Women With Cancer: Cross-Sectional Study

JMIR Cancer 2017;3(2):e19

DOI: 10.2196/cancer.7973

PMID: 29175813

PMCID: 5722981

Demands and Needs for Psycho-Oncological eHealth Interventions in Women With Cancer: Cross-Sectional Study

  • Johanna Ringwald; 
  • Lennart Marwedel; 
  • Florian Junne; 
  • Katrin Ziser; 
  • Norbert Schäffeler; 
  • Lena Gerstner; 
  • Markus Wallwiener; 
  • Sara Yvonne Brucker; 
  • Martin Hautzinger; 
  • Stephan Zipfel; 
  • Martin Teufel

ABSTRACT

Background:

Over the last decade, a growing body of studies regarding the application of eHealth and various digital interventions has been published and are widely used in the psycho-oncological care. However, the effectiveness of eHealth applications in psycho-oncological care is still questioned due to missing considerations regarding evidence-based studies on the demands and needs in cancer-affected patients.

Objective:

This cross-sectional study aimed to explore the cancer-affected women’s needs and wishes for psycho-oncological content topics in eHealth applications and whether women with cancer differ in their content topics and eHealth preferences regarding their experienced psychological burden.

Methods:

Patients were recruited via an electronic online survey through social media, special patient Internet platforms, and patient networks (both inpatients and outpatients, University Hospital Tuebingen, Germany). Participant demographics, preferences for eHealth and psycho-oncological content topics, and their experienced psychological burden of distress, quality of life, and need for psychosocial support were evaluated.

Results:

Of the 1172 patients who responded, 716 were included in the study. The highest preference for psycho-oncological content topics reached anxiety, ability to cope, quality of life, depressive feelings, and adjustment toward a new life situation. eHealth applications such as Web-based applications, websites, blogs, info email, and consultation hotline were considered to be suitable to convey these content topics. Psychological burden did not influence the preference rates according to psycho-oncological content and eHealth applications.

Conclusions:

Psycho-oncological eHealth applications may be very beneficial for women with cancer, especially when they address psycho-oncological content topics like anxiety, ability to cope, depressive feelings, self-esteem, or adjustment to a new life situation. The findings of this study indicate that psycho-oncological eHealth applications are a promising medium to improve the psychosocial care and enhance individual disease management and engagement among women with cancer.


 Citation

Please cite as:

Ringwald J, Marwedel L, Junne F, Ziser K, Schäffeler N, Gerstner L, Wallwiener M, Brucker SY, Hautzinger M, Zipfel S, Teufel M

Demands and Needs for Psycho-Oncological eHealth Interventions in Women With Cancer: Cross-Sectional Study

JMIR Cancer 2017;3(2):e19

DOI: 10.2196/cancer.7973

PMID: 29175813

PMCID: 5722981

Per the author's request the PDF is not available.

© The authors. All rights reserved. This is a privileged document currently under peer-review/community review (or an accepted/rejected manuscript). Authors have provided JMIR Publications with an exclusive license to publish this preprint on it's website for review and ahead-of-print citation purposes only. While the final peer-reviewed paper may be licensed under a cc-by license on publication, at this stage authors and publisher expressively prohibit redistribution of this draft paper other than for review purposes.