1. Narrative nursing for cancer patients: a meta-analysis
- Author
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Min Zhang, Ying-Ming Sun, Na Sun, and Ya-Nan Leng
- Subjects
narrative ,nursing ,quality of life ,depression ,cancer ,anxiety ,lcsh:Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,lcsh:RC254-282 - Abstract
Objective:To systematically review the effect of narrative nursing for cancer patients. Methods:Systematic searches in PubMed, EMBASE, The Cochrane Library, Web of Science, Chinese biomedical literature database, China National Knowledge Infrastructure, Wanfang medical and VIP database were performed for randomized controlled trials (RCTs) or quasi-RCTs which explored the effects of narrative nursing mode for cancer patients. Then, meta-analysis was performed by RevMan 5.3 after two independent investigators screened the literature, extracted the data and evaluated the risk of bias of all included studies. Results:A total of 15 studies were included, including 1778 cancer patients. The meta-analysis showed that narrative nursing could effectively relieve patients' anxiety and depression compared with the conventional nursing model (WMD = -9.04, 95% CI = -11.82, -6.27; P < 0.001), reduce the the inner shame (WMD = -2.28, 95% CI = -3.76, -0.88; P = 0.001), improved the mental resilience (WMD = 18.20, 95% CI = 3.30, 33.11; P < 0.001) and the quality of life. Conclusion:This study has been systematically evaluated to show that narrative care can effectively improve the negative mood of patients with cancer and improve their quality of life. However, subject to the quality limitations of the included studies, the appeal conclusions are yet to be tested in more high-quality studies.
- Published
- 2019