Article

"It makes you feel so full of life": LiveWell, a feasibility study of a personalised lifestyle programme for colorectal cancer survivors

Details

Citation

Anderson AS, Caswell S, Wells M, Steele R & MacAskill S (2010) "It makes you feel so full of life": LiveWell, a feasibility study of a personalised lifestyle programme for colorectal cancer survivors. Supportive Care in Cancer, 18 (4), pp. 409-415. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00520-009-0677-4

Abstract
Goals: The acceptability and feasibility of a 3-month personalised lifestyle (diet, exercise and weight management) intervention in overweight adults who had completed curative treatment for colorectal cancer were assessed by qualitative interviews, quality-of-life questionnaires and subjective and objective measures of diet and activity. Main results Over a 4-month period, 28 of 37 (75%) patients met the inclusion criteria and 20 (71%) of the eligible patients agreed to participate in the study and 18 (90%) completed the 3-month study. Reported adherence related to tailored advice, personalised feedback and family support. Reported barriers included time following surgery, fatigue, having a stoma or chronic diarrhoea and conflicting advice from clinicians. A weight change of −1.2 (±4.4) kg was achieved overall and −4.1 (±3.7) kg in the ten who had lost weight. Conclusions: Colorectal cancer survivors will participate in a lifestyle change initiative. Interventions should be personalised to suit abilities, provide feedback on personal goals and encourage social support. Intervention timing and attaining greater support from clinicians should be explored prior to the development of an efficacy trial.

Keywords
obesity; diet; activity; colorectal cancer; intervention

Journal
Supportive Care in Cancer: Volume 18, Issue 4

StatusPublished
Publication date30/04/2010
Date accepted by journal04/06/2009
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/2478
PublisherSpringer
ISSN0941-4355
eISSN1433-7339

People (1)

Professor Mary Wells

Professor Mary Wells

Honorary Professor, NMAHP