A Scoping Review Exploring Access to Survivorship Care for Childhood, Adolescent, and Young Adult Cancer Survivors: How Can We Optimize Care Pathways?

IF 1.7 Q2 PEDIATRICS
Adolescent Health Medicine and Therapeutics Pub Date : 2023-09-21 eCollection Date: 2023-01-01 DOI:10.2147/AHMT.S428215
Jordana K McLoone, Ursula M Sansom-Daly, Alexia Paglia, Jessica Chia, Hanne Bækgaard Larsen, Lorna A Fern, Richard J Cohn, Christina Signorelli
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Childhood, adolescent, and young adult (CAYA) cancer survivors are at risk of developing late effects associated with their cancer and its treatment. Survivors' engagement with recommended follow-up care to minimize these risks is suboptimal, with many barriers commonly reported. This scoping review aims to summarize the barriers to accessing follow-up care, using the dimensions of Levesque's framework for accessing healthcare. We retrieved quantitative studies addressing barriers and facilitators to accessing survivorship care in CAYA survivors from PubMed, EMBASE and CINAHL. Data was categorized into the five healthcare access dimensions outlined in Levesque's framework: i) approachability, ii) acceptability, iii) availability and accommodation, iv) affordability, and v) appropriateness. We identified 27 quantitative studies in our review. Commonly reported barriers to accessing care included a lack of survivor and provider knowledge of cancer survivorship, poor health beliefs, low personal salience to engage in follow-up care, high out-of-pocket costs and survivors living long distances from clinical services. Many studies reported increased barriers to care during the transition from paediatric to adult-oriented healthcare services, including a lack of developmentally appropriate services, lack of appointment reminders, and a poorly defined transition process. Healthcare-related self-efficacy was identified as an important facilitator to accessing follow-up care. The transition from pediatric to adult-oriented healthcare services is a challenging time for childhood, adolescent, and young adult cancer survivors. Optimizing CAYAs' ability to access high-quality survivorship care thus requires careful consideration of the quality and acceptability of services, alongside financial and physical/practical barriers (eg distance from available services, appointment-booking mechanisms). Levesque's model highlighted several areas where evidence is well established (eg financial barriers) or lacking (eg factors associated with engagement in follow-up care) which are useful to understand barriers and facilitators that impact access to survivorship for CAYA cancer survivors, as well as guiding areas for further evaluation.

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

探索儿童、青少年和年轻癌症幸存者获得幸存者护理的范围审查:我们如何优化护理途径?
儿童、青少年和年轻人(CAYA)癌症幸存者有发展与癌症及其治疗相关的晚期效应的风险。幸存者接受建议的后续护理以最大限度地减少这些风险是次优的,通常报告有许多障碍。这项范围界定审查旨在利用莱维斯克获得医疗保健框架的维度,总结获得后续护理的障碍。我们检索了PubMed、EMBASE和CINAHL关于CAYA幸存者获得生存护理的障碍和促进因素的定量研究。数据分为Levsque框架中概述的五个医疗保健获取维度:i)可接近性,ii)可接受性,iii)可用性和住宿,iv)可负担性,以及v)适当性。我们在综述中确定了27项定量研究。通常报告的获得护理的障碍包括幸存者和提供者缺乏癌症生存率的知识、健康信念差、个人参与后续护理的重要性低、自费成本高以及幸存者远离临床服务。许多研究报告称,在从儿科向成人医疗服务过渡期间,护理障碍增加,包括缺乏适合发展的服务、缺乏预约提醒以及过渡过程定义不清。与医疗保健相关的自我效能感被确定为获得后续护理的重要促进因素。对于儿童、青少年和年轻的癌症幸存者来说,从儿科医疗服务向成人医疗服务的转变是一个充满挑战的时期。因此,优化CAYA获得高质量生存护理的能力需要仔细考虑服务的质量和可接受性,同时考虑财务和物理/实际障碍(如与可用服务的距离、预约机制)。Levsque的模型强调了证据确凿(如财务障碍)或缺乏(如与参与后续护理相关的因素)的几个领域,这些领域有助于了解影响CAYA癌症幸存者获得生存机会的障碍和推动者,以及指导进一步评估的领域。
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来源期刊
自引率
0.00%
发文量
13
审稿时长
16 weeks
期刊介绍: Adolescent Health, Medicine and Therapeutics is an international, peer reviewed, open access journal focusing on health, pathology, and treatment issues specific to the adolescent age group, including health issues affecting young people with cancer. Original research, reports, editorials, reviews, commentaries and adolescent-focused clinical trial design are welcomed. All aspects of health maintenance, preventative measures, disease treatment interventions, studies investigating the poor outcomes for some treatments in this group of patients, and the challenges when transitioning from adolescent to adult care are addressed within the journal. Practitioners from all disciplines are invited to submit their work as well as health care researchers and patient support groups. Areas covered include: Physical and mental development in the adolescent period, Behavioral issues, Pathologies and treatment interventions specific to this age group, Prevalence and incidence studies, Diet and nutrition, Specific drug handling, efficacy, and safety issues, Drug development programs, Outcome studies, patient satisfaction, compliance, and adherence, Patient and health education programs and studies.
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