Brain tumor patients' rights and the power of patient advocacy: The current international landscape.

IF 2.4 Q2 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Neuro-oncology practice Pub Date : 2024-09-04 eCollection Date: 2025-02-01 DOI:10.1093/nop/npae079
Kathy Oliver, Anita Granero, Anna Berankova, Cameron Miller, Catherine Hindson, Charles La Haye, Chris Tse, Christine Mungoshi, Danielle Leach, David Arons, Fiona Keegan, Helen Bulbeck, Hugh Adams, Jolijn Dirksje Boer, Kimberly Wallgren, Komal Syed, Laura Hynes, Laureline Gatellier, Magdalena Magiera, Melissa Lim, Mikki Campbell, Nicole Willmarth, Nitin Garg, Pia Riis Olsen, Sarah Rogers, Tejpal Gupta, Tina Mitchell Skinner, Yuko Moue
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Across the globe, significant inequities in brain tumor treatment, care, and support perpetuate. Identifying and addressing these unmet needs in the context of patients' rights is crucial to reducing inequalities and improving outcomes for people living with brain tumors. Brain tumor patient advocacy addresses and influences gaps in healthcare provision, ensuring optimal treatment, care, and support for patients, their caregivers, and families. Therefore, the purpose of this review is to highlight the variety of challenges faced by brain tumor patients, caregivers, and advocates in various parts of the world and set a benchmark for improvements. Twenty-eight leading brain tumor patient/caregiver advocates from 18 countries in Asia Pacific, Sub-Saharan Africa, North America, Eastern Europe, and Western Europe collaborated to explore unmet and met needs in their countries. Virtual meetings were held with the 5 geographic groupings. Through a process of discussion based on a combination of patient advocates' informed expert opinion, published references, a survey (Asia Pacific) and the informal completion of a matrix of challenges by some of the advocacy organizations involved, agreement within the groupings was also reached regarding what rights within The Brain Tumor Patients' Charter of Rights they felt were being met and where there are still gaps. Acknowledging that some rights in The Brain Tumor Patients' Charter of Rights are aspirational, there still remain many areas of the world where even basic patient rights are not yet attainable. Patient advocacy organizations stand ready to help change this to achieve the best possible health and quality of life outcomes for adults and children living with brain tumors.

脑肿瘤患者的权利和患者倡导的力量:当前的国际格局。
在全球范围内,脑肿瘤治疗、护理和支持方面的严重不平等现象持续存在。在患者权利的背景下确定和解决这些未得到满足的需求,对于减少不平等现象和改善脑肿瘤患者的预后至关重要。脑肿瘤患者倡导解决并影响医疗保健提供方面的差距,确保为患者、其护理人员和家属提供最佳治疗、护理和支持。因此,本综述的目的是强调世界各地脑肿瘤患者、护理人员和倡导者面临的各种挑战,并为改进制定基准。来自亚太、撒哈拉以南非洲、北美、东欧和西欧18个国家的28位主要脑肿瘤患者/护理人员倡导者合作,探索各自国家未满足和已满足的需求。与5个地理分组举行了虚拟会议。通过结合患者倡导者的知情专家意见、已发表的参考文献、一项调查(亚太地区)和一些相关倡导组织非正式完成的挑战矩阵的讨论过程,分组内部还就他们认为《脑肿瘤患者权利宪章》中的哪些权利得到了满足以及在哪些方面仍有差距达成了一致。承认《脑肿瘤患者权利宪章》中的一些权利是理想的,但世界上仍有许多地区甚至连基本的患者权利都无法实现。患者倡导组织随时准备帮助改变这一状况,为患有脑瘤的成人和儿童实现尽可能好的健康和生活质量结果。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Neuro-oncology practice
Neuro-oncology practice CLINICAL NEUROLOGY-
CiteScore
5.30
自引率
11.10%
发文量
92
期刊介绍: Neuro-Oncology Practice focuses on the clinical aspects of the subspecialty for practicing clinicians and healthcare specialists from a variety of disciplines including physicians, nurses, physical/occupational therapists, neuropsychologists, and palliative care specialists, who have focused their careers on clinical patient care and who want to apply the latest treatment advances to their practice. These include: Applying new trial results to improve standards of patient care Translating scientific advances such as tumor molecular profiling and advanced imaging into clinical treatment decision making and personalized brain tumor therapies Raising awareness of basic, translational and clinical research in areas of symptom management, survivorship, neurocognitive function, end of life issues and caregiving
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