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Psychosocial Concerns in the Postoperative Oncology Patient.

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OBJECTIVES To describe psychosocial concerns associated with the postoperative cancer patient and to discuss current psychosocial evidence-based approaches to manage these psychosocial concerns. DATA SOURCES Published peer-reviewed literature. CONCLUSION The… Click to show full abstract

OBJECTIVES To describe psychosocial concerns associated with the postoperative cancer patient and to discuss current psychosocial evidence-based approaches to manage these psychosocial concerns. DATA SOURCES Published peer-reviewed literature. CONCLUSION The postoperative phase of cancer care may be associated with a range of overlapping acute and chronic psychosocial concerns related to the surgery itself, the cancer diagnosis, and the need for ongoing cancer treatments. The postoperative period of cancer care represents an essential time to detect unmet psychosocial concerns and begin timely interventions for these concerns. IMPLICATIONS FOR NURSING PRACTICE Nurses are in a key position to detect, triage, refer, or manage psychosocial concerns in the postoperative patient with cancer. Current psychosocial evidence-based approaches may be used by surgical oncology nurses or other nurses who care for cancer patients during postoperative recovery.

Keywords: oncology patient; postoperative oncology; cancer; oncology; concerns postoperative; psychosocial concerns

Journal Title: Seminars in oncology nursing
Year Published: 2017

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