"My Husband Has Breast Cancer": A Qualitative Study of Experiences of Female Partners of Men With Breast Cancer

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

"My Husband Has Breast Cancer" : A Qualitative Study of Experiences of Female Partners of Men With Breast Cancer. / Egestad, Lisbeth Kofoed; Gyldenvang, Helle Holm; Jarden, Mary.

In: Cancer Nursing, Vol. 43, No. 5, 2020, p. 366-374.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Egestad, LK, Gyldenvang, HH & Jarden, M 2020, '"My Husband Has Breast Cancer": A Qualitative Study of Experiences of Female Partners of Men With Breast Cancer', Cancer Nursing, vol. 43, no. 5, pp. 366-374. https://doi.org/10.1097/NCC.0000000000000710

APA

Egestad, L. K., Gyldenvang, H. H., & Jarden, M. (2020). "My Husband Has Breast Cancer": A Qualitative Study of Experiences of Female Partners of Men With Breast Cancer. Cancer Nursing, 43(5), 366-374. https://doi.org/10.1097/NCC.0000000000000710

Vancouver

Egestad LK, Gyldenvang HH, Jarden M. "My Husband Has Breast Cancer": A Qualitative Study of Experiences of Female Partners of Men With Breast Cancer. Cancer Nursing. 2020;43(5):366-374. https://doi.org/10.1097/NCC.0000000000000710

Author

Egestad, Lisbeth Kofoed ; Gyldenvang, Helle Holm ; Jarden, Mary. / "My Husband Has Breast Cancer" : A Qualitative Study of Experiences of Female Partners of Men With Breast Cancer. In: Cancer Nursing. 2020 ; Vol. 43, No. 5. pp. 366-374.

Bibtex

@article{21dc7f52268d494999c38de7c1ba0ffe,
title = "{"}My Husband Has Breast Cancer{"}: A Qualitative Study of Experiences of Female Partners of Men With Breast Cancer",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: Relatives of patients with cancer are at risk of experiencing changes to their everyday life, health, and quality of life. Partners of men with breast cancer may face certain challenges regarding their need for information, care, and support.OBJECTIVE: The purpose was to explore the experiences of the partners of men with breast cancer in relation to care, information, and emotional support and to explore how men with breast cancer impact the partners' everyday life.METHOD: This was a qualitative study based on individual interviews applying a phenomenological-hermeneutical analysis.RESULTS: Four themes were identified in the 12 female partners' narratives: a wall of ignorance, being seen is not a matter of course, emotional stress affects everyday life, and side effects strain the couples' relationship.CONCLUSION: The female partners' need for information on male breast cancer (MBC) is not sufficiently met because of lack of and poorly communicated information on the topic. The female partner assumes the role of advocate, actively seeking information when in contact with health professionals. Daily life is negatively affected by a lack of acknowledgement of the impact of MBC on their lives and needs by their social networks or health professionals.IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE: Female partners have individual care, information, and emotional support needs that may differ from those of their male partner with breast cancer. Health professionals must improve communication with patients and relatives as there are lack of knowledge available regarding MBC and lack of evidence-based guidelines.",
author = "Egestad, {Lisbeth Kofoed} and Gyldenvang, {Helle Holm} and Mary Jarden",
year = "2020",
doi = "10.1097/NCC.0000000000000710",
language = "English",
volume = "43",
pages = "366--374",
journal = "Cancer Nursing",
issn = "0162-220X",
publisher = "Lippincott Williams & Wilkins",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - "My Husband Has Breast Cancer"

T2 - A Qualitative Study of Experiences of Female Partners of Men With Breast Cancer

AU - Egestad, Lisbeth Kofoed

AU - Gyldenvang, Helle Holm

AU - Jarden, Mary

PY - 2020

Y1 - 2020

N2 - BACKGROUND: Relatives of patients with cancer are at risk of experiencing changes to their everyday life, health, and quality of life. Partners of men with breast cancer may face certain challenges regarding their need for information, care, and support.OBJECTIVE: The purpose was to explore the experiences of the partners of men with breast cancer in relation to care, information, and emotional support and to explore how men with breast cancer impact the partners' everyday life.METHOD: This was a qualitative study based on individual interviews applying a phenomenological-hermeneutical analysis.RESULTS: Four themes were identified in the 12 female partners' narratives: a wall of ignorance, being seen is not a matter of course, emotional stress affects everyday life, and side effects strain the couples' relationship.CONCLUSION: The female partners' need for information on male breast cancer (MBC) is not sufficiently met because of lack of and poorly communicated information on the topic. The female partner assumes the role of advocate, actively seeking information when in contact with health professionals. Daily life is negatively affected by a lack of acknowledgement of the impact of MBC on their lives and needs by their social networks or health professionals.IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE: Female partners have individual care, information, and emotional support needs that may differ from those of their male partner with breast cancer. Health professionals must improve communication with patients and relatives as there are lack of knowledge available regarding MBC and lack of evidence-based guidelines.

AB - BACKGROUND: Relatives of patients with cancer are at risk of experiencing changes to their everyday life, health, and quality of life. Partners of men with breast cancer may face certain challenges regarding their need for information, care, and support.OBJECTIVE: The purpose was to explore the experiences of the partners of men with breast cancer in relation to care, information, and emotional support and to explore how men with breast cancer impact the partners' everyday life.METHOD: This was a qualitative study based on individual interviews applying a phenomenological-hermeneutical analysis.RESULTS: Four themes were identified in the 12 female partners' narratives: a wall of ignorance, being seen is not a matter of course, emotional stress affects everyday life, and side effects strain the couples' relationship.CONCLUSION: The female partners' need for information on male breast cancer (MBC) is not sufficiently met because of lack of and poorly communicated information on the topic. The female partner assumes the role of advocate, actively seeking information when in contact with health professionals. Daily life is negatively affected by a lack of acknowledgement of the impact of MBC on their lives and needs by their social networks or health professionals.IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE: Female partners have individual care, information, and emotional support needs that may differ from those of their male partner with breast cancer. Health professionals must improve communication with patients and relatives as there are lack of knowledge available regarding MBC and lack of evidence-based guidelines.

U2 - 10.1097/NCC.0000000000000710

DO - 10.1097/NCC.0000000000000710

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 30925510

VL - 43

SP - 366

EP - 374

JO - Cancer Nursing

JF - Cancer Nursing

SN - 0162-220X

IS - 5

ER -

ID: 241419689