Experience and Satisfaction of Cancer Patients With a Central Venous Catheter at a Tertiary Hospital in South Korea : Journal of Infusion Nursing

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Experience and Satisfaction of Cancer Patients With a Central Venous Catheter at a Tertiary Hospital in South Korea

Park, Jeong Yun PhD, RN, APN; Lee, Da In PhD, RN

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Journal of Infusion Nursing 43(2):p 97-102, March/April 2020. | DOI: 10.1097/NAN.0000000000000360

Abstract

As cancer chemotherapy transitions from inpatient care to outpatient care, the number of patients who receive a central venous catheter (CVC) and the interest in CVCs as a safe intravenous administration route have increased recently in South Korea. The purpose of this study was to investigate the discomforts and satisfaction that cancer patients with a CVC may experience in daily activities as an outpatient and to provide rationale for nursing interventions. Data collection was conducted between April 11, 2011, and August 31, 2011. Forty-three questionnaires were collected, and a total of 41 questionnaires were used for the final analysis. The mean age of patients was 45.1 years (SD = 11.1 years; range, 18–64 years). The average score of experience of the CVC insertion procedure, daily life experiences of patients with a CVC, the satisfaction and fear of using a CVC, and the acceptance of CVCs were 2.48 ± 0.56, 2.18 ± 0.50, 2.56 ± 0.49, and 2.35 ± 0.39, respectively. The results showed that more detailed information on CVCs, as well as sufficient emotional support, should be provided to the patient to minimize discomfort during CVC insertion. Patient-centered education helps empower patients to master CVC self-management, as well as an understanding of the cultural aspect of South Korean patients who practice the traditional Confucian ethics of “unaltering one's body” and are therefore reluctant to have CVCs inserted into their bodies.

Erratum

In the March/April 2020 issue of the Journal of Infusion Nursing, there was an error in the article entitled “Experience and Satisfaction of Cancer Patients With a Central Venous Catheter at a Tertiary Hospital in South Korea” by Jeong Yun Park and Da In Lee.

Da In Lee's affiliation should have read as follows:

Da In Lee, PhD, RN, is assistant professor of nursing at Seoil University in Seoul, Korea. She has 7 years of clinical nursing experience as a nurse in Korea. She has been teaching nursing college students for the last 10 years and is committed to research for the advancement of nursing.

Journal of Infusion Nursing. 43(3):166, May/June 2020.

© 2020 Infusion Nurses Society

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