TY - JOUR
T1 - Experiences of care partners co-surviving in the context of living with metastatic breast cancer
AU - Lally, Robin M.
AU - Tlusty, Gisele
AU - Tanis, Katherine
AU - Lake, Katherine
AU - Jobanputra, Julia
AU - Cozad, Melanie
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Objective: Explore experiences of women and care partners living with metastatic breast cancer (MBC) in the new environment of extended MBC survival. Care partner results are presented. Design: Qualitative descriptive interviews with conventional content analysis. Sample: Twelve care partners nominated by 1-to-5-year MBC survivors participating in the overall study. Methods: Semi-structured interviews conducted over phone, Zoom, and in-person. Findings: “Becoming a Co-survivor” entailed 5 categories: Meeting New Challenges, Changing Supportive Roles, Navigating Decisions, Emotional Toll, and Coping. Sixteen subcategories provided depth and dimension. Qualitative differences depicted journeying from heighted emotions to increasing expertise and mutual communication between survivors and care partners over time. Conclusions: MBC care partners possess varied characteristics, and experience challenges influenced by time since MBC diagnosis, necessitating further study. Implications for Psychosocial Providers: Acknowledge the variety of persons who assume care partner roles, assess needs, and design programs to address psychosocial challenges presenting along the survivorship continuum.
AB - Objective: Explore experiences of women and care partners living with metastatic breast cancer (MBC) in the new environment of extended MBC survival. Care partner results are presented. Design: Qualitative descriptive interviews with conventional content analysis. Sample: Twelve care partners nominated by 1-to-5-year MBC survivors participating in the overall study. Methods: Semi-structured interviews conducted over phone, Zoom, and in-person. Findings: “Becoming a Co-survivor” entailed 5 categories: Meeting New Challenges, Changing Supportive Roles, Navigating Decisions, Emotional Toll, and Coping. Sixteen subcategories provided depth and dimension. Qualitative differences depicted journeying from heighted emotions to increasing expertise and mutual communication between survivors and care partners over time. Conclusions: MBC care partners possess varied characteristics, and experience challenges influenced by time since MBC diagnosis, necessitating further study. Implications for Psychosocial Providers: Acknowledge the variety of persons who assume care partner roles, assess needs, and design programs to address psychosocial challenges presenting along the survivorship continuum.
KW - Cancer survivors
KW - caregivers
KW - dyadic coping
KW - metastatic breast cancer
KW - psychosocial
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U2 - 10.1080/07347332.2025.2465576
DO - 10.1080/07347332.2025.2465576
M3 - Article
C2 - 39960053
AN - SCOPUS:85219683878
SN - 0734-7332
JO - Journal of Psychosocial Oncology
JF - Journal of Psychosocial Oncology
ER -