TY - JOUR
T1 - Studying the social construction of cancer-related fatigue experience: The heuristic value of Ethnoscience
AU - Graffigna, Guendalina
AU - Vegni, Elena
AU - Barello, Serena
AU - Olson, Karin
AU - Bosio, Albino Claudio
PY - 2011
Y1 - 2011
N2 - Objectives: Patients’ lived experience of illness and health is receiving increased attention in the medical
field. Understanding patients’ perspective and experiences is an undoubted asset for efficient health
interventions and improved clinical concordance. Patients’ experiences of care and cure, however, are
influenced by the cultural setting in which these experiences take place. This implies that health
interventions should be ‘‘ecological’’ and attuned to the specific sociocultural context of the patients.
Methods: Our research group is conducting a cross-cultural qualitative study aimed ad exploring how
fatigue (a symptom very common in cancer) is perceived and manifested by patients in different
countries (Canada, Thailand, England and Italy). In order to achieve this, the study was design according
to the method of Ethnoscience, that appeared to us the best suited to explore themeanings that patients
attribute to their state and the linguistic patterns they use to describe it. In this paper we will describe in
details the process of Ethnoscience and will discuss the heuristic value of this research approach.
Results: Ethnoscience was an effective research strategy for exploring how beliefs and values shape
symptoms and the behavioural manifestations of cancer related fatigue.
Conclusions: This paper discusses the heuristic value of Ethnoscience and its applicability to the study of
health relate topics, particularly those where issues of social construction are important.
Practical implications: Ethnoscience is a promising and innovative research approach, able to cast light
on the way people experience and make sense of their illness.
AB - Objectives: Patients’ lived experience of illness and health is receiving increased attention in the medical
field. Understanding patients’ perspective and experiences is an undoubted asset for efficient health
interventions and improved clinical concordance. Patients’ experiences of care and cure, however, are
influenced by the cultural setting in which these experiences take place. This implies that health
interventions should be ‘‘ecological’’ and attuned to the specific sociocultural context of the patients.
Methods: Our research group is conducting a cross-cultural qualitative study aimed ad exploring how
fatigue (a symptom very common in cancer) is perceived and manifested by patients in different
countries (Canada, Thailand, England and Italy). In order to achieve this, the study was design according
to the method of Ethnoscience, that appeared to us the best suited to explore themeanings that patients
attribute to their state and the linguistic patterns they use to describe it. In this paper we will describe in
details the process of Ethnoscience and will discuss the heuristic value of this research approach.
Results: Ethnoscience was an effective research strategy for exploring how beliefs and values shape
symptoms and the behavioural manifestations of cancer related fatigue.
Conclusions: This paper discusses the heuristic value of Ethnoscience and its applicability to the study of
health relate topics, particularly those where issues of social construction are important.
Practical implications: Ethnoscience is a promising and innovative research approach, able to cast light
on the way people experience and make sense of their illness.
KW - ethnoscience
KW - qualitative research
KW - ethnoscience
KW - qualitative research
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10807/10571
U2 - 10.1016/j.pec.2010.12.017
DO - 10.1016/j.pec.2010.12.017
M3 - Article
SN - 0738-3991
VL - 82
SP - 402
EP - 409
JO - Patient Education and Counseling
JF - Patient Education and Counseling
ER -