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Keywords = cinemeducation

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15 pages, 491 KiB  
Review
“Give My Daughter the Shot!”: A Content Analysis of the Depiction of Patients with Cancer Pain and Their Management in Hollywood Films
by Karim Mukhida, Sina Sedighi and Catherine Hart
Curr. Oncol. 2022, 29(11), 8207-8221; https://doi.org/10.3390/curroncol29110648 - 29 Oct 2022
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 2872
Abstract
Introduction: Cinemeducation, the pedagogical use of films, has been used in a variety of clinical disciplines. To date, no studies have looked at the use of film depictions of cancer pain and its management in clinical education. We investigated how patients with cancer [...] Read more.
Introduction: Cinemeducation, the pedagogical use of films, has been used in a variety of clinical disciplines. To date, no studies have looked at the use of film depictions of cancer pain and its management in clinical education. We investigated how patients with cancer pain and their management are depicted in Hollywood films to determine whether there is content that would be amenable to use for cancer pain assessment and management education. Methods: A qualitative content analysis was performed. Films that contained characters with or references to cancer pain were searched for using the International Movie Database, the Literature Arts Medicine Database, the History of Medicine and Medical Humanities Database, and Medicine on Screen. After review, 4 films were identified for review and analysis. Results: Themes that emerged from the analysis concerned the films’ depictions of characters with pain, their healthcare providers, the therapies used for pain management, and the setting in which pain management was provided. Conclusions: This study demonstrates that patients with cancer pain are depicted in a compassionate manner. Pain management focused on the use of opioids. The settings in which patients received pain management was depicted as not being amenable to providing holistic care. This variety of topics related to pain management covered in the films make them amenable to use in cinemeducation. This study therefore forms the basis for future work developing film-based cancer education modules. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Psychosocial Oncology)
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