As the landscape of cancer survivorship rapidly evolves, the journey of healing extends far beyond the confines of medical treatment. An increasing number of individuals who have battled cancer face persistent emotional and psychological challenges, particularly anxiety and depression, which affect nearly one-third of this population. These struggles often remain hidden in silence, adding layers of complexity to the post-treatment phase and significantly diminishing quality of life. This emerging reality emphasizes a critical need for innovative approaches that prioritize not only physical recovery but also the emotional and mental well-being of survivors.
Recent research underscores the pivotal role resilience plays in this context. Defined as the capacity to rebound from adversity, resilience is emerging as a foundational element in managing psychological distress and enhancing well-being among cancer survivors. Resilience-building interventions hold the promise of transforming survivorship care by addressing the fundamental human processes that support emotional healing. This perspective calls for a paradigm shift toward whole-person healthcare models that integrate emotional, psychological, and spiritual dimensions alongside conventional medical treatments.
In a groundbreaking initiative aligned with Breast Cancer Awareness Month, researchers from Florida Atlantic University’s Christine E. Lynn College of Nursing have conducted the first comprehensive scoping review dedicated to examining caring-healing modalities (CHMs) aimed at fostering resilience and alleviating emotional distress in cancer patients. Published in the esteemed journal Nursing Reports, this review represents a significant advance in understanding how non-traditional therapeutic interventions can complement biomedical treatments to support survivorship.
The review delves deeply into multiple CHMs, including mindfulness programs, peer support frameworks, and expressive therapies, all of which share an emphasis on healing environments rooted in empathetic human connection. Notably, the majority of studies incorporated within the review emphasize breast cancer survivors, revealing a glaring gap in research on other cancer types and underscoring the need for broader application of CHMs. This focus draws attention to the prolonged emotional and spiritual challenges that continue long after clinical treatment concludes.
Grounded in Watson’s Theory of Human Caring, the review synthesizes evidence from sixteen global studies spanning randomized controlled trials to systematic reviews. These investigations explore CHMs implemented in diverse clinical and community settings—from hospitals and outpatient clinics to home-based care. Despite the heterogeneity in modalities and environments, a cohesive narrative emerges about the power of caring-centered interactions, which facilitate emotional expression, empathetic listening, and safe spaces for processing complex feelings such as fear, grief, hope, and transformation.
An essential insight from the review is the therapeutic significance of the environment itself. Rita Gengo, Ph.D., co-author and assistant professor at FAU, emphasizes that the healing setting—which may include elements like reduced noise, privacy, and calmness—functions as more than just backdrop; it acts as an active agent of care that enables psychological repair and reflective restoration. This assertion places CHMs squarely within the broader framework of holistic healing and environmental psychology.
One of the most compelling findings involves the effectiveness of group-based CHMs. Both in-person and virtual group sessions create vital communities of support where survivors can share their experiences, decrease feelings of loneliness, and discover sources of inner strength. These group dynamics resonate strongly with the principles delineated by Watson’s Caritas Processes, which advocate for authentic presence, trust-building, and education rooted in compassion and respect. By fostering a sense of belonging and mutual care, group interventions act as powerful catalysts for emotional healing.
Watson’s Caritas Processes offer a profound theoretical scaffold for understanding the impact of CHMs in cancer care. These processes focus intensively on caring for the whole person—mind, body, and spirit—through deep human connection and compassionate attention. The processes implore nurses and caregivers to transcend routine clinical tasks and instead cultivate genuine relationships that honor patient dignity and facilitate transformative healing beyond the traditional scope of physical care.
CHMs harness the transformative potential of human connection. As co-author Lenny Chiang-Hanisko, Ph.D., explains, caring partnerships empower individuals to reconnect with their innermost selves, expand their emotional resilience, and activate their inherent capacity to heal. This humanistic lens situates CHMs not merely as adjunct therapies but as central pillars of survivorship care that address the core of existential suffering and growth.
Mindfulness-based techniques figure prominently among the CHMs reviewed, including methodologies like Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction, Mindful Self-Compassion, and Attention and Interpretation Therapy. These interventions encourage patients to maintain present-moment awareness, engage in self-compassion, and observe emotional turmoil without judgment. Such practices effectively reduce symptoms of anxiety and depression while nurturing psychological resilience, enabling survivors to navigate the complexities of post-cancer life with greater equanimity.
Diversity and adaptability are hallmarks of CHMs delivery modes. Interventions seamlessly transition between face-to-face, online, and hybrid formats, enhancing accessibility and accommodating varied patient preferences and logistical constraints. Durations range from brief sessions lasting 20 to 30 minutes to extensive, multi-month programs that align closely with Watson’s conceptualization of sustained, caring-healing relationships. The clinical value observed across this spectrum demonstrates the flexibility of CHMs to meet individual needs at different stages of the survivorship trajectory.
Beyond improvements in emotional distress and resilience, many studies document additional benefits of CHMs, including enhanced quality of life, increased self-compassion, and relief from physical symptoms such as fatigue, insomnia, and pain. Intriguingly, some investigations also explore biological markers related to stress, suggesting that CHMs contribute to measurable physiological benefits. This integration of subjective well-being and objective biomarkers heralds a new era of precision nursing—one that harmonizes cutting-edge science with compassionate holistic care.
The vision articulated by Judyta Kociolek, director of the FAU Clinical Research Unit and oncological nurse turned researcher, is compelling: a future where personalized care interweaves the richness of human experience with biological insights. By marrying the art and science of nursing, CHMs pave the way toward a healthcare paradigm that is not only evidence-based but also profoundly humanistic, reflecting the complex needs of cancer survivors in their post-treatment journeys.
Despite these promising advances, important challenges remain. The scope of research on CHMs is limited concerning many cancer types beyond breast cancer, highlighting a pressing need for expanded investigation and clinical trials. Moreover, financial barriers and inadequate reimbursement schemes constrain the widespread adoption of complementary therapies in standard survivorship care. Researchers advocate for increased funding, robust healthcare policies, and integration of CHMs into conventional oncology frameworks to ensure comprehensive, accessible survivorship support.
In conclusion, the emerging exploration of caring-healing modalities marks a transformative moment in cancer care that transcends the traditional focus on disease eradication. By embracing resilience, emotional connectedness, and holistic healing principles embodied in Watson’s Theory of Human Caring, healthcare providers can redefine survivorship as a multidimensional process of restoration and growth. As survivorship populations expand globally, these insights offer hope for a future where healing truly extends beyond treatment—restoring not just bodies, but hearts and minds alike.
Subject of Research: People
Article Title: Caring-Healing Modalities for Emotional Distress and Resilience in Persons with Cancer: A Scoping Review
News Publication Date: 10-Sep-2025
Web References: http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nursrep15090334
References: Nursing Reports, 10-Sep-2025, DOI: 10.3390/nursrep15090334
Image Credits: Alex Dolce, Florida Atlantic University
Keywords: Cancer, Anxiety, Empathy, Fear, Grief, Emotions, Nursing, Spirituality, Meditation
Tags: Breast Cancer Awareness Month initiativescancer survivorship strategiescomprehensive care for cancer survivorsemotional well-being in cancer survivorsholistic healthcare for cancer patientsimportance of emotional healing in cancer recoveryinnovative healing modalities for cancer survivorsintegrating mental health in cancer treatmentmanaging anxiety and depression post-cancerpsychological challenges in cancer recoveryresilience-building interventions for survivorstransformative approaches to survivorship care