Haptotherapy can contribute substantially to overall recovery of people with cancer.
•Psychological processing is related to the connection with one's body.
•Many patients with cancer lack awareness of a disturbed relationship to the body.
•Mostly, they will not bring this up themselves or express it in a request for help.
•Professionals in oncology should explore patients' perception of physicality.
AbstractBackgroundand purpose: Many people with cancer face far-reaching physical effects of the disease. In oncological care, the psychological impact of these consequences seems to be overlooked. Haptotherapy has the potential to fill this gap. The aim of the present study was to gain in-depth understanding of haptotherapy for people with cancer as reported by patients and haptotherapists.
Materials and methodsA qualitative study consisting of in-depth interviews with patients with cancer and haptotherapists regarding haptotherapy. Inductive coding and thematic content analysis were used.
ResultsInterviews were conducted with fourteen patients and nine haptotherapists. The following five themes were identified: (1) perceived problems of patients with cancer who consult a haptotherapist, such as a severely disturbed relationship with the body, together with emotional and identity problems; (2) the content of sessions and therapy process, based on haptotherapeutic affective touch and therapeutic conversation; (3) what haptotherapy brings about in patients with cancer, notably a felt awareness of the loss of body contact and of suppressed feelings and emotions; (4) the essence of haptotherapy for patients with cancer, in particular touch as connection between physical and emotional feeling; and (5) the role of the haptotherapist, especially their sensitivity, subtle observations and focus on the patient as a person.
ConclusionHaptotherapy can make a substantial contribution to the overall recovery of patients with cancer and fill the gap in usual care by restoration of both contact with and trust in the body, thus supporting the associated emotional processing.
KeywordsAffective touch
Body contact
Cancer
Feelings
Haptotherapy
Psychological processing
© 2025 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
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