TY - JOUR
T1 - Provision of survivorship care for patients with haematological malignancy at completion of treatment
T2 - A cancer nursing practice survey study
AU - Wallace, Ann
AU - Downs, Erin
AU - Gates, Priscilla
AU - Thomas, Alison
AU - Yates, Patsy
AU - Chan, Raymond Javan
PY - 2015/10
Y1 - 2015/10
N2 - Purpose: Many haematological cancer survivors report long-term physiological and psychosocial effects, which persist far beyond treatment completion. Cancer services have been required to extend care to the post-treatment phase to implement survivorship care strategies into routine practice. As key members of the multidisciplinary team, cancer nurses' perspectives are essential to inform future developments in survivorship care provision. Methods: This is a pilot survey study, involving 119 nurses caring for patients with haematological malignancy in an Australian tertiary cancer care centre. The participants completed an investigator developed survey designed to assess cancer care nurses' perspectives on their attitudes, confidence levels, and practice in relation to post-treatment survivorship care for patients with a haematological malignancy. Results: Overall, the majority of participants agreed that all of the survivorship interventions included in the survey should be within the scope of the nursing role. Nurses reported being least confident in discussing fertility and employment/financial issues with patients and conducting psychosocial distress screening. The interventions performed least often included, discussing fertility, intimacy and sexuality issues and communicating survivorship care with the patient's primary health care providers. Nurses identified lack of time, limited educational resources, lack of dedicated end-of-treatment consultation and insufficient skills/knowledge as the key barriers to survivorship care provision. Conclusion: Cancer centres should implement an appropriate model of survivorship care and provide improved training and educational resources for nurses to enable them to deliver quality survivorship care and meet the needs of haematological cancer survivors.
AB - Purpose: Many haematological cancer survivors report long-term physiological and psychosocial effects, which persist far beyond treatment completion. Cancer services have been required to extend care to the post-treatment phase to implement survivorship care strategies into routine practice. As key members of the multidisciplinary team, cancer nurses' perspectives are essential to inform future developments in survivorship care provision. Methods: This is a pilot survey study, involving 119 nurses caring for patients with haematological malignancy in an Australian tertiary cancer care centre. The participants completed an investigator developed survey designed to assess cancer care nurses' perspectives on their attitudes, confidence levels, and practice in relation to post-treatment survivorship care for patients with a haematological malignancy. Results: Overall, the majority of participants agreed that all of the survivorship interventions included in the survey should be within the scope of the nursing role. Nurses reported being least confident in discussing fertility and employment/financial issues with patients and conducting psychosocial distress screening. The interventions performed least often included, discussing fertility, intimacy and sexuality issues and communicating survivorship care with the patient's primary health care providers. Nurses identified lack of time, limited educational resources, lack of dedicated end-of-treatment consultation and insufficient skills/knowledge as the key barriers to survivorship care provision. Conclusion: Cancer centres should implement an appropriate model of survivorship care and provide improved training and educational resources for nurses to enable them to deliver quality survivorship care and meet the needs of haematological cancer survivors.
KW - Cancer survivor
KW - Haematological cancer
KW - Oncology nurses
KW - Physiological effects
KW - Psychosocial effects
KW - Survivorship care
KW - Survivorship care model
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84943197463&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.ejon.2015.02.012
DO - 10.1016/j.ejon.2015.02.012
M3 - Article
C2 - 25795159
AN - SCOPUS:84943197463
SN - 1462-3889
VL - 19
SP - 516
EP - 522
JO - European Journal of Oncology Nursing
JF - European Journal of Oncology Nursing
IS - 5
ER -