by Xiuqun Yuan, Yuting Chen, Huihui Lu, Pei Zheng, Yanyan Zhang, Min Chen, Xia Sheng Objectives Post-prostatectomy patients experience urinary incontinence, fluctuating quality of life, and psychosocial distress during early survivorship. Evidence-based nursing models addressing long-term supportive needs remain limited.
This study developed and evaluated an enhanced survivorship-oriented care model designed to improve postoperative functional recovery and quality-of-life outcomes. Methods A retrospective study was conducted at a tertiary urologic center.
The improved survivorship model was developed based on our previous PROSTATE care model, integrating nurse-led continuous follow-up, psychosocial support, and structured rehabilitation. A total of 1062 patients who underwent radical prostatectomy between June 2024 and May 2025 received the enhanced survivorship care, compared with 673 patients treated between June 2023 and December 2023 under the previous PROSTATE care model.
Outcomes included urinary continence, quality of life, postoperative complications, and length of stay. Between-group comparisons were performed using independent-samples tests, and repeated-measures ANOVA was applied to assess longitudinal changes.
PLOS ONE (Medicine) published a clinical update in Research Highlights on 03 Apr 2026.
The item focuses on A survivorship-oriented enhanced care model for patients undergoing radical prostatectomy.
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