Investigator

Saravana Kumar

Professor of Allied Health and Health Services Research · Adelaide University, School of Allied Health and Human Performance

SKSaravana Kumar
Papers(1)
Psychosocial interven…
Institutions(1)
Unknown Institution

Papers

Psychosocial interventions for ovarian cancer survivors: A systematic review

AbstractObjectivesOvarian cancer survivorship is complex and is associated with greater symptom burden, fear of reoccurrence, sexual dysfunction, lower quality of life and heightened existential distress in contrast to other cancers. This systematic review aimed to investigate the effectiveness for, and perspective of, psychosocial interventions encompassing psychological, social, and emotional support, tailored to, or involving ovarian cancer survivors at all stages of disease.MethodsAdhering to the PRISMA‐SR statement guidelines, a systematic search was conducted across PsycINFO, MEDLINE, Embase, Emcare, CINAHL, Scopus, Cochrane Library databases, Google, and Google Scholar. Two reviewers independently undertook a two‐stage screening process. The Mixed Methods Appraisal Tool was utilised to assess the methodological quality of included studies. Data were extracted using customised data extraction tools and narratively synthesised.ResultsThirteen studies were included in this review. Generally positive effects of psychosocial interventions were observed across a range of outcome domains (meaning enhancing, cognitive, social, emotional, and cancer‐specific). However, the characteristics of interventions and outcome measures varied across studies. Psychoeducational interventions were identified as the most common psychosocial approach, while Acceptance and Commitment Therapy showed promise in addressing the disease's high symptom burden. Women's perspectives of psychosocial interventions were described as “useful” and promoted positive self‐regard.ConclusionWhile the evidence base largely support positive effects of psychosocial interventions for ovarian cancer survivors, this finding is constrained by heterogeneity of interventions and modest gains. Future research may explore the standardisation of psychosocial interventions for this demographic, investigating its effects on less explored but prevalent concerns among ovarian cancer survivors such as fear of cancer recurrence and sexual dysfunction.

294Works
1Papers

Positions

2026–

Professor of Allied Health and Health Services Research

Adelaide University · School of Allied Health and Human Performance

2011–

Senior Lecturer

University of South Australia · School of Health Sciences

Education

2005

Doctor of Philosophy

University of South Australia · School of Health Sciences

2000

Master of Physiotherapy (Manipulative and Sports)

University of South Australia · School of Health Sciences

1998

Bachelor of Applied Science (Physiotherapy)

University of South Australia · School of Health Sciecnes

Country

AU

Keywords
Evidence-Based Practice and ImplementationHealth Services ResearchAllied HealthQuality and SafPhysiotherapyManipulative and SportsTeaching and Learning
Links & IDs
0000-0002-4003-4411Home page

Scopus: 57199402250

Researcher Id: B-8876-2009