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The experience and impact of contacting a cancer information service
Author(s) -
VENN M. J.,
DARLING E.,
DICKENS C.,
SLEVIN M. L.,
QUINE L.,
RUTTER D. R.
Publication year - 1996
Publication title -
european journal of cancer care
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.849
H-Index - 67
eISSN - 1365-2354
pISSN - 0961-5423
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-2354.1996.tb00204.x
Subject(s) - medicine , service (business) , family medicine , perception , nursing , patient satisfaction , emotional support , social support , social psychology , psychology , economy , neuroscience , economics
Our objective was to review the quality of service delivered by a national cancer information service–the British Association of Cancer United Patients (BACUP)–and to consider the implications for future policy and practice. We used a sample of callers over a 10‐day period, responding to a structured postal questionnaire. The sample included patients, relatives, friends, and general public who called the service with any concern relating to cancer. Of the 406 invited to take part, 282 responded (69%). The questionnaire was designed to evaluate the callers' perceptions of the information they received, their perceptions of the nurse's communication skills, the emotional impact of the call, and their overall satisfaction with the service. The results indicate that over 90% of callers evaluated the information they received and the nurse's communication skills positively, and there was no difference between the two major groups of callers, i.e. patients and relatives/friends. Both groups reported that the call had a positive emotional impact on them and that they were satisfied with the service. Emotional impact was predicted by quality of information for patients and nurse's communication skills for friends/relatives; overall satisfaction was predicted by nurse's communication skills for patients and both measures for relatives/friends. We conclude that the telephone is an effective medium for conveying information about cancer, and BACUP is meeting its needs. The needs of patients and relatives/friends are different–principally information for patients and support for relatives/friends–and it may be possible to improve training still further by focusing on those differences. The main challenge for cancer information services is to meet the ever‐increasing demand.

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