Abstract
Standardised health care is primarily focused on remediation and delivered episodically through costly and fragmented health-care systems. Such an approach is untenable, given the diversity and complexity of peoples' health-care needs, increasing prevalence of chronic disease and existing heath inequities. A life course perspective fundamentally challenges our current understanding of health care and has great potential to promote innovation in health-care practice, systems and policy. However, the way that health develops and manifests across the life course is a highly complex process underpinned by a plethora of causal antecedents, consequences and interdependencies that have yet to be adequately captured and articulated in current life course frameworks. The field of cancer survivorship and its recent rise to prominence provides a highly relevant and compelling case example to inform development and refinement of existing life course frameworks. Cancer survivorship exemplifies what can be described as an integrated diachronic life course perspective, which serves as a conceptual framework to enhance our understanding of health development across the life course and guide health-care practice, systems and policy to meet the increasingly complex health-care needs of current and future generations.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | e70012 |
| Number of pages | 15 |
| Journal | Sociology of Health and Illness |
| Volume | 47 |
| Issue number | 2 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - Feb 2025 |
Keywords
- cancer survivorship
- holistic care
- integrated care
- life course theory
- patient navigation
- shared care