The Effect of Fatigue-Related Education on Pediatric Oncology Patients' Fatigue and Quality of Life

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Date

2019

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Springer

Open Access Color

Green Open Access

Yes

OpenAIRE Downloads

8

OpenAIRE Views

4

Publicly Funded

No
Impulse
Top 10%
Influence
Average
Popularity
Top 10%

Research Projects

Journal Issue

Abstract

The identification of cancer-related fatigue as a clinical problem in pediatric oncology is an important phenomenon, and there are limited number of studies about raising the awareness of pediatric oncology patients and their parents. Fatigue-related education for patients and their parents before and during cancer treatment reduces the fatigue levels of patients. This study aims to analyze the effect of fatigue-related education for pediatric oncology patients aged 7-12 and their parents on their fatigue and quality of life. This study was conducted with 80 children with cancer and their parents who were assigned to either the control group (n = 40) or the experimental group (n = 40). The experimental group received a fatigue-related educational program. The data were collected three times: prior to the program, 3 months later, and 6 months afterwards. Multidimensional variance analysis, the Bonferroni adjusted t test and regression analysis were used to analyze the data. A significant difference was found among the experimental and the control group for total mean scores and the mean scores of subdimensions of the Scale for the Assessment of Fatigue-Child Form in terms of the interactions of group, time, and group*time (p < 0.05). Significant differences were found among the experimental and control groups' mean scores on the Scale for the Quality of Life-Child and Parents Form in terms of the interactions of group, time, and group*time (p < 0.05). Fatigue-related education is an effective education model as a way to reduce fatigue and increase the quality of life of children with cancer. The use of fatigue-related education by nurses in pediatric oncology clinics will have positive effects on children and their parents.

Description

Keywords

Cancer, Fatigue, Quality of life, Education of related fatigue, Cancer-Related Fatigue, Children, Symptoms, Chemotherapy, Program, Feasibility, Adolescents, Adult, Male, Parents, Adolescent, Patient Education as Topic, Neoplasms, Practice Guidelines as Topic, Quality of Life, Humans, Female, Child, Fatigue

Fields of Science

03 medical and health sciences, 0302 clinical medicine

Citation

WoS Q

Q3

Scopus Q

Q3
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OpenCitations Citation Count
13

Source

Journal of Cancer Educatıon

Volume

34

Issue

6

Start Page

1130

End Page

1141
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Citations

Scopus : 17

PubMed : 5

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Mendeley Readers : 60

SCOPUS™ Citations

17

checked on Mar 16, 2026

Web of Science™ Citations

13

checked on Mar 16, 2026

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2.899

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3

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