Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byMay Mason Modified over 8 years ago
1
CHEMOTHERAPY INDUCED NAUSEA & VOMITING A LOOK INTO USE OF ADJUNCTIVE THERAPY & STRATEGIES IN NAUSEA MANAGEMENT FOR CHILDREN FACED WITH CANCER Presentation narration in notes
2
PICO APPLICATION AND RESULTS PICO: Compared to the sole use of standard pharmaceutical management of nausea, does enlistment of adjuvant therapies in combination to standard anti- emetics offer improved nausea control to pediatric cancer patients? Search terms use in CINAHL and PubMed: nausea control, nausea management, nausea intervention, nausea and vomiting, pediatric, children, childhood, oncology, cancer, complementary, alternative, nonpharamacologic, adjuvant, therapy, modalities. and treatment. Search products: 17 total articles resulted published from 1984 - 2012
3
SELECTED ARTICLES Gregurich, Mary Ann, et al. (2012). Children's coping strategies for chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting. Oncology Nursing Forum, 39(2), 202-209. Rheingans, J. (2007). A systematic review of nonpharmacologic adjunctive therapies for symptom management in children with cancer. Journal of Pediatric Oncology Nursing, 24(2), 81-94.
4
ARTICLE SELECTION MOTIVES Quantitative- conclusive review of efficacy Statistical analysis- comprehensive answer Provision of practice implication- studies resulting from qualitative data findings Collective evaluation- inclusion of multiple methods, assessment not fixated to a single modality. Purpose/hypothesis
5
STUDY ANALYSIS Children's coping strategies for chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting. In Oncology Nursing Forum Theory: Symptom management theory Study type: Descriptive research Design: Prospective cohort study Method: Setting and Sample Instruments Procedure Data Analysis
6
STUDY ANALYSIS A systematic review of nonpharmacologic adjunctive therapies for symptom management in children with cancer. In Journal of Pediatric Oncology Nursing Theory: Unidentified Study type: Quantitative Design: Systematic Review Method: Research synthesis Results: Study topics, funding, and designs
7
STUDY ANALYSIS Findings Children’s Coping Strategies for Chemotherapy-Induced Nausea and Vomiting Chemotherapy Induced Nausea and Vomiting Coping Frequency Coping Efficacy A Systematic Review of Nonpharmacologic Adjunctive Therapies for Symptom Management in Children with Cancer Summarized by Symptom Effective NAT Approaches
8
ETHICAL INTERESTS Children’s Coping Strategies for Chemotherapy-Induced Nausea and Vomiting Both consent and assent were secured Recall bias potential Caucasian males numbers dominated study
9
CREDIBILITY Children's coping strategies for chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting. In Oncology Nursing Forum Strength: Quality: Credibility Criteria and EBP Contribution:
10
CREDIBILITY A systematic review of nonpharmacologic adjunctive therapies for symptom management in children with cancer. In Journal of Pediatric Oncology Nursing Strength: Quality: Credibility
11
RELEVANCE OF FINDINGS TO PRACTICE Children's coping strategies for chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting. In Oncology Nursing Forum Communication method: Quality and safety practice alterations implied: Potential barriers: Additional PICO question uncovered:
12
RELEVANCE OF FINDINGS TO PRACTICE A systematic review of nonpharmacologic adjunctive therapies for symptom management in children with cancer. In Journal of Pediatric Oncology Nursing Communication method: Quality and safety practice alterations implied: Potential barriers: Additional PICO question(s) uncovered:
13
CONCLUSION While the limited studies suggest there is evidence support that alternative to pharmaceutical management in chemotherapy induced nausea/vomiting can be successful, further research is needed to strengthen the findings of efficacy.
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.