Article

An exploratory study on the quality of life and individual coping of cancer patients during mistletoe therapy.

Research Department, Paracelsus Hospital Richterswil, Richterswil, Switzerland.
Integrative Cancer Therapies (impact factor: 2.14). 07/2011; 11(2):90-100. DOI:10.1177/1534735411413267 pp.90-100
Source: PubMed

ABSTRACT Although several clinical studies have shown that mistletoe therapy (MT, Viscum album) may improve cancer patients' quality-of-life (QoL), qualitative information on the improvement's nature is still lacking.
This exploratory, prospective, cohort-study comprised 25 patients with different types of cancer. The patients filled in the EORTC QLQ-C30 Version 3.0 questionnaire at the beginning of MT (n = 25) and three months later (n = 21). If patients agreed, they were interviewed on both occasions (n = 17); the interviews were transcribed verbatim and submitted to a qualitative content analysis (n = 12).
Analysis of the questionnaires showed significant improvements in several subscales during MT. The interviews analysis revealed that most patients adopted the MT with a supportive goal, with all patients undergoing conventional therapies. After three months of MT, most interviewed patients revealed higher vitality and autonomy. MT was often seen as a chance to make an own personal contribution to the therapy, which was particularly appreciated in cases in which no conventional therapy was (anymore) advised. Concrete personal achievements such as changes in the private and/or in the professional environment were spontaneously mentioned by the patients, illustrating and corroborating their improvements in QoL.
Our results show that the patients experienced an improvement of QoL during MT. This therapy seemed to offer a platform for an integrative coping with the disease, which might be important in reconciling the perceived shock of an existential illness with a good QoL.

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Keywords

25 patients
 
cancer patients' quality-of-life
 
clinical studies
 
cohort-study
 
conventional therapy
 
corroborating
 
different types
 
existential illness
 
good QoL
 
higher vitality
 
improvement's nature
 
interviews analysis
 
mistletoe therapy
 
own personal contribution
 
patients undergoing conventional therapies
 
perceived shock
 
professional environment
 
qualitative content analysis
 
qualitative information
 
supportive goal
 

Mathias Brandenberger