Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT01440855

Evaluation of the Efficacy of National Cancer Institute's Facing Forward Booklet in the Cancer Community Setting

Efficacy and Feasibility of a Psychosocial Intervention Within CCOP Context: Evaluation of the Facing Forward Guide to Facilitate Life After Active Cancer Treatment (CCOP:Community Clinical Oncology Program)

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
340 (actual)
Sponsor
Fox Chase Cancer Center · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

This study was designed to provide a preliminary evaluation of the efficacy and usability of the 2004 revised version of the booklet, Facing Forward , Life After Cancer Treatment, (hereafter,Facing Forward) published by the National Cancer Institute. Facing Forward provides early stage cancer patients during the period after completing active treatment practical ways of dealing with common problems, including guidelines for managing physical, social, and emotional health. Assessments were completed at the patient's final cancer treatment visit. Follow-up assessments occurred eight weeks and 6 months later. The initial assessments covered background information (demographics, medical status), use of educational materials, survivorship activities, and psychological factors. The follow-up assessments included use of actions recommended in Facing Forward, ratings of Facing Forward with respect the booklet's informativeness, helpfulness, understandability, and extent read, the same psychological measures used initially, and a measure of self-efficacy.

Detailed description

This study was designed to provide a preliminary evaluation of the efficacy and usability of the 2004 revised version of the booklet, Facing Forward, Life After Cancer Treatment (hereafter,Facing Forward)published by the National Cancer Institute. Facing Forward provides early stage cancer patients during the period after completing active treatment practical ways of dealing with common problems, including guidelines for managing physical, social, and emotional health. The study employed a randomized controlled repeated measures design and compared Facing Forward with a control document published by the National Cancer Institute, The Cancer Information Service: Questions and Answers. The intervention arm received both Facing Forward and the control document and the control arm received only the latter. Assessments were completed at baseline, which occurred at the patient's final cancer treatment visit or alternatively at the first follow-up visit for those scheduled to be evaluated and/or restaged within 28 days of their last treatment visit. The first follow-up assessment occurred eight weeks following the baseline assessment via mail-home materials, and the second occurred 6 months following the baseline assessment, again via mail-home materials. Baseline measures included background information (demographics, medical status), use of educational materials, survivorship activities engaged in, and psychological factors. The 8-week and 6-month assessments included uptake of actions recommended in Facing Forward, and ratings of Facing Forward with respect to its usability, including the booklet's informativeness, helpfulness, understandability, and extent read, and the same psychological factors assessed at baseline.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERCIS (Cancer Information Service) Information SheetCIS Fact Sheet, available on the Cancer Information Service website. Used to control for attention. 5-page document provides information about the CIS:What is it, How can CIS information specialists help me, How can I use CIS's services. Also includes definitions of glossary terms and a table of email and website addresses.
OTHERFacing Forward bookletNCI's (NCI: National Cancer Institute) Facing Forward 61-page booklet, which describes common feelings and reactions that cancer survivors experience during the re-entry phase and offers behavioral recommendations to help them through this period, i.e., ways of dealing with common problems and guidelines for managing physical, social, and emotional health. Booklet sections: Congratulations on Finishing Your Cancer Treatment, Getting Follow-up Medical Care, Ways to Manage Physical Changes, Body Changes and Intimacy, Your Feelings, Social and Work Relationships, Reflection, 6-page Appendix, which provides information on Financial and Legal Matters, and Resource Organizations.

Timeline

Start date
2005-02-01
Primary completion
2009-10-01
Completion
2009-10-01
First posted
2011-09-27
Last updated
2011-10-04

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT01440855. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.