Abstract
Cancer is the number one disease killer of children and adolescents in North America. For adolescents, this diagnosis comes at a particularly vulnerable stage. Educating adolescents with cancer from diagnosis through treatment teaches and empowers them. Increasing evidence shows that these adolescents want more information. Few educational tools exist for young cancer patients; none are interactive; therefore, a CD-ROM was developed to meet this need. Animation, voiceover, music, videos, and games were combined to develop a comprehensive multimedia CD-ROM to teach 12- to 18-year-olds with solid tumors about their disease, treatment, coping skills, and late effects in an interactive and non-threatening way. The CD-ROM was evaluated in a pre-post design with 65 subjects recruited from four pediatric oncology centers randomized to the CD-ROM or a "Handbook" containing analogous information. Pre-post questionnaires measured coping strategies, health locus of control, quality of life, cancer knowledge, and self-efficacy; post-test variables also included acceptability and use by teens, their families, and healthcare professionals. Teens receiving the CD-ROM were significantly more likely to increase their internal locus of control scores; however, no significant differences were observed on other measures, attributable in part to the study sample size. Among teens, acceptability was higher in the CD-ROM versus the Handbook group, but not different between the two parent groups. Pediatric oncology healthcare providers gave positive feedback on the CD-ROM. This CD-ROM is an innovative and engaging educational tool--the first portable interactive product with access on demand for adolescents with solid tumors.
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