Tobacco use among pediatric cancer patients: recommendations for developing clinical smoking interventions.

1997 ◽  
Vol 15 (6) ◽  
pp. 2194-2204 ◽  
Author(s):  
V L Tyc ◽  
M M Hudson ◽  
P Hinds ◽  
V Elliott ◽  
M Y Kibby

PURPOSE AND METHODS: The current status of tobacco use among young cancer patients and the acute and chronic complications associated with tobacco use in these patients is reviewed. RESULTS AND CONCLUSION: Studies report that adolescent cancer survivors use tobacco as much as their peers who have never been treated for cancer, despite the adverse consequences of engaging in this unhealthy habit. Health care professionals have the opportunity and responsibility to incorporate tobacco counseling as a routine component of medical care delivery. Nurse/physician-delivered smoking interventions have been found to promote smoking cessation in adults, although little effort has been devoted to the development of similarly effective smoking interventions for pediatric cancer patients who smoke. Components of existing smoking prevention/cessation curricula from successful school-based interventions and physician-delivered smoking interventions can be adapted and tailored to pediatric cancer patients in medical settings. Smoking interventions that educate patients about their increased vulnerability to tobacco-related consequences, relative to their healthy peers, may have an enhanced impact. Guidelines for conducting a comprehensive assessment of tobacco use and implementing smoking interventions with pediatric cancer patients is provided. Strategies for modifying the cancer patient's perceived vulnerability to tobacco-related consequences is also discussed.

2019 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas D. Ryan ◽  
William L. Border ◽  
Carissa Baker-Smith ◽  
Ana Barac ◽  
Matthew J. Bock ◽  
...  

Abstract Objective To enhance the understanding of cardiovascular care delivery in childhood cancer patients and survivors. Study design A 20-question survey was created by the Pediatric Cardio-oncology Work Group of the American College of Cardiology (ACC) Cardio-oncology Section to assess the care, management, and surveillance tools utilized to manage pediatric/young adult cardio-oncology patients. The survey distribution was a collaborative effort between Cardio-oncology Section and membership of the Adult Congenital and Pediatric Cardiology Section (ACPC) of the ACC. Results Sixty-five individuals, all self-identified as physicians, responded to the survey. Most respondents (n = 58,89%) indicated childhood cancer patients are regularly screened prior to and during cancer therapy at their centers, predominantly by electrocardiogram (75%), standard echocardiogram (58%) and advanced echocardiogram (50%) (i.e. strain, stress echo). Evaluation by a cardiologist prior to/during therapy was reported by only 8(12%) respondents, as compared to post-therapy which was reported by 28 (43%, p < 0.01). The most common indications for referral to cardiology at pediatric centers were abnormal test results (n = 31,48%) and history of chemotherapy exposure (n = 27,42%). Of note, during post-treatment counseling, common cardiovascular risk-factors like blood pressure (31,48%), lipid control (22,34%), obesity & smoking (30,46%) and diet/exercise/weight loss (30,46%) were addressed by fewer respondents than was LV function (72%). Conclusions The survey data demonstrates that pediatric cancer patients are being screened by EKG and/or imaging prior to/during therapy at most centers. Our data, however, highlight the potential for greater involvement of a cardiovascular specialist for pre-treatment evaluation process, and for more systematic cardiac risk factor counseling in posttreatment cancer survivors.


2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Leandro Miletto Tonetto ◽  
Valentina Marques da Rosa ◽  
Priscila Brust-Renck ◽  
Megan Denham ◽  
Pedro Marques da Rosa ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Cancer care can negatively impact children’s subjective well-being. In this research, well-being refers to patients’ self-perception and encompasses their hospital and care delivery assessment. Playful strategies can stimulate treatment compliance and have been used to provide psychosocial support and health education; they can involve gamification, virtual reality, robotics, and healthcare environments. This study aims to identify how playfulness, whenever applicable, can be used as a strategy to improve the subjective well-being of pediatric cancer patients in the Brazilian Unified Health System. Methods Sixteen volunteers with experience in pediatric oncology participated in the study. They were physicians, psychologists, child life specialists, and design thinking professionals. They engaged in design thinking workshops to propose playful strategies to improve the well-being of pediatric cancer patients in the Brazilian Unified Health System. Data collection consisted of participatory observations. All activities were video recorded and analyzed through Thematic Analysis. The content generated by the volunteers was classified into two categories: impact of cancer care on children’s self-perception and children’s perceptions of the hospital and the care delivery. Results Volunteers developed strategies to help children deal with time at the hospital, hospital structure, and care delivery. Such strategies are not limited to using playfulness as a way of “having fun”; they privilege ludic interfaces, such as toys, to support psychosocial care and health education. They aim to address cancer and develop communication across families and staff in a humanized manner, educate families about the disease, and design children-friendly environments. Volunteers also generated strategies to help children cope with perceptions of death, pain, and their bodies. Such strategies aim to support understanding the meaning of life and death, comprehend pain beyond physicality, help re-signify cancer and children’s changing bodies, and give patients active voices during the treatment. Conclusions The paper proposes strategies that can improve the well-being of pediatric cancer patients in the Brazilian Unified Health System. Such strategies connect children’s experiences as inpatients and outpatients and may inform the implementation of similar projects in other developing countries.


2013 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fransisca M. Sidabutar ◽  
Anggie Regia Anandari ◽  
Ingrid Karli ◽  
Yusnita Katagori ◽  
Henny E. Wirawan

2007 ◽  
Author(s):  
Margaret M. Mannix ◽  
Nicole Furnari ◽  
Adam Rudolph ◽  
Karen M. Moody

2001 ◽  
Author(s):  
Barbara O. Rothbaum ◽  
Larry F. Hodges ◽  
Jonathan Gershon ◽  
Michael Briones ◽  
Melissa Pickering

2012 ◽  
Vol 82 ◽  
pp. S17 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Al Jaouni ◽  
A. Hussein ◽  
M. Al Muhayawi ◽  
K. Ibrahim ◽  
I. Elfiki

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