乳腺癌相关淋巴水肿的差异:护理中的不公平和障碍的系统回顾。

IF 1.5 Q3 SURGERY
Alexzandra Mattia, Nina Hadzimustafic, Rachel Rivero, SeungJu Jackie Oh, Karen Bach, Stav Brown, Siba Haykal
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:乳腺癌相关淋巴水肿(BCRL)是一种继发于多模式癌症治疗的慢性疾病。本系统综述总结了围绕BCRL治疗的差异和障碍的证据,特别是在诊断、教育和治疗可及性方面。方法:从1990年1月1日至2024年10月3日,按照系统评价和元分析指南的首选报告项目,对PubMed/MEDLINE、Embase、Scopus和Web of Science进行检索。纳入了混合方法、定性、横断面、多病例、纵向和随机对照试验,这些试验报告了围绕BCRL治疗的差异和障碍。综述文章、社论、评论、摘要、海报、患者报告结果测量的翻译或验证以及非英文文章均被排除在外。结果:检索到1059篇文章,其中39篇符合纳入标准。确定的主题包括:种族和族裔差异;与年龄小、受教育程度低、收入低、农村地理位置和存在医疗合并症相关的风险增加;提供者和患者知识不足;患者教育程度低;终身自我管理的负担与挑战在接受医疗保健提供者诊断或适当的BCRL管理方面存在障碍。次级主题包括累积费用负担、社会心理障碍和患者自我效能的作用。结论:年轻的非白人妇女、农村地区的居民以及收入或教育水平较低的妇女似乎是自我报告(而不是医生诊断)BCRL的最大风险。不同种族和民族背景和低社会经济地位的患者在自我保健教育和乳腺癌生存支持不足方面的风险增加。积极预防与多学科干预是降低BCRL率,赋予乳腺癌幸存者权力,并加强自我效能感的必要条件。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Disparities in Breast Cancer-related Lymphedema: A Systematic Review of Inequities and Barriers in Care.

Background: Breast cancer-related lymphedema (BCRL) is a chronic condition secondary to multimodal cancer treatment. This systematic review summarized the evidence for disparities and barriers surrounding BCRL care, particularly in diagnosis, education, and accessibility to treatment.

Methods: A search of PubMed/MEDLINE, Embase, Scopus, and Web of Science following the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses guidelines was conducted from January 1, 1990, through October 3, 2024. Mixed-methods, qualitative, cross-sectional, multiple-case, longitudinal, and randomized controlled trials that reported disparities and barriers surrounding BCRL care were included. Review articles, editorials, commentaries, abstracts, poster papers, translation or validation of patient-reported outcome measures, and non-English articles were excluded.

Results: The search yielded 1059 articles, and 39 met inclusion criteria. Themes identified included the following: racial and ethnic disparities; increased risk associated with younger age, low education level, low income, rural geographic location, and presence of medical comorbidities; inadequate provider and patient knowledge; low patient education; burden and challenges with lifelong self-management; and barriers in receiving healthcare provider diagnosis or adequate BCRL management. Subthemes included cumulative cost burden, psychosocial barriers, and the role of patient self-efficacy.

Conclusions: Younger non-White women, residents of rural regions, and those with low income or education levels seemed to be at greatest risk for self-reported (rather than physician-diagnosed) BCRL. Patients of diverse racial and ethnic backgrounds and low socioeconomic status were at increased risk for inadequate self-care education and breast cancer survivorship support. Active prevention with multidisciplinary interventions is imperative to lower BCRL rates, empower breast cancer survivors, and strengthen self-efficacy.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.20
自引率
13.30%
发文量
1584
审稿时长
10 weeks
期刊介绍: Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery—Global Open is an open access, peer reviewed, international journal focusing on global plastic and reconstructive surgery.Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery—Global Open publishes on all areas of plastic and reconstructive surgery, including basic science/experimental studies pertinent to the field and also clinical articles on such topics as: breast reconstruction, head and neck surgery, pediatric and craniofacial surgery, hand and microsurgery, wound healing, and cosmetic and aesthetic surgery. Clinical studies, experimental articles, ideas and innovations, and techniques and case reports are all welcome article types. Manuscript submission is open to all surgeons, researchers, and other health care providers world-wide who wish to communicate their research results on topics related to plastic and reconstructive surgery. Furthermore, Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery—Global Open, a complimentary journal to Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, provides an open access venue for the publication of those research studies sponsored by private and public funding agencies that require open access publication of study results. Its mission is to disseminate high quality, peer reviewed research in plastic and reconstructive surgery to the widest possible global audience, through an open access platform. As an open access journal, Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery—Global Open offers its content for free to any viewer. Authors of articles retain their copyright to the materials published. Additionally, Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery—Global Open provides rapid review and publication of accepted papers.
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