Objective
Little is understood about patient expectations and use of complementary therapies (CT) during cancer treatment. A secondary analysis of an 11‐week reflexology trial among women with breast cancer was conducted. We examined factors that predicted women’s expectations about reflexology for symptom relief, factors that predicted utilisation of reflexology, and whether by the end of the trial they believed that reflexology had helped with symptom management.
Methods
Women (N = 256) were interviewed at baseline and week 11. Friend or family caregivers in the reflexology group were trained to deliver standardised sessions to patients at least once a week for 4 weeks. Baseline and week‐11 reflexology expectations were analysed using general linear models. Reflexology utilisation was analysed with generalised linear mixed effects models.
Results
Patients who expected benefits from reflexology (“higher expectancy”) at baseline were younger, had lower anxiety, higher education, higher spirituality, and greater CT use. Worsening symptoms over time were associated with greater utilisation of reflexology, but only when baseline expectancy was low. At week 11, expectancy was higher for those with greater symptom improvement.
Conclusions
Assessing patterns of patient factors, expectancy, and change in symptoms can help determine who is likely to use reflexology, and when.