ecancermedicalscience

Research

Nursing intervention in women who developed lymphedema after undergoing a modified radical mastectomy: a pre-experimental study

19 Apr 2018
Gloria Daniela de la Borbolla Martínez, Martha Elena Huitzache Martínez, Nicolás Padilla Raygoza

The aim of this study was to analyse the effect of a nursing intervention in increasing the therapeutic self-care demand in patients with breast cancer-related lymphedema after a mastectomy. The pre-experiment was carried out on women in the State Cancer Institute in Colima, Mexico. Thirty women who had undergone a mastectomy were included in this study. Each woman received a nursing intervention to increase her knowledge, skills and motivation, which are the components of therapeutic self-care demand. Students’ t and P values were calculated for paired means, and the McNemar X2 test was performed for paired categorical variables. It was found that Students’ t values for therapeutic self-care demand, knowledge, skills and motivation were significant (all with P = 0.00001). It was also found that McNemar X 2 values for the same criteria paired categorically were significant (P = 0.0002, P = 0.003, P= 0.0002, P = 0.00001, respectively). It was concluded that the nursing intervention was effective in increasing the therapeutic self-care demand of patients with post-mastectomy breast cancer.

Related Articles

Soumitra Shankar Datta, Heena Sheth, Sharmili Ghosh, Srijan Das, Jigeesha Ghosh, Dishari Choudhury, Arnab Mukherjee, Soumita Ghose, Romy Biswas, Maria Castrillo Gil, Carlos Andres Gamboa Alfaro, Mary Guevara, Danny Burke, Sujit Sarkhel, Jai Ranjan Ram
Seema Rajesh Rao, Mithili Narayan Sherigar, Michelle Normen, Udita Joshi