ELLICSR: Health, Wellness and Cancer Survivorship Centre, Toronto General Hospital, University Health Network, Clinical Services Building, BCS021, 200 Elizabeth Street, Toronto, ON, M5G 2C4, Canada.
J Cancer Surviv. 2012 Sep;6(3):296-304. doi: 10.1007/s11764-012-0220-3. Epub 2012 Apr 17.
New models of survivorship care are required to address the needs of genitourinary (GU) cancer survivors. Current approaches do not effectively engage cancer survivors or advocacy groups. A group of clinicians in collaboration with the Canadian Urologic Association held a forum for GU cancer survivors, advocacy groups, and health professionals to explore ways to collaboratively enhance survivorship care.
Participants attended a 2-day conference that included presentations, breakout groups, and a postconference survey. Discussions by breakout groups were recorded and analyzed alongside open-ended survey responses for common themes. Basic statistics were calculated.
Conference participants (n = 42) included 18 cancer survivors/caregivers, 21 health professionals, and 3 researchers representing bladder, kidney, prostate, and testis cancer groups. Breakout group discussions and responses to the postconference survey (83.3 % response rate) showed strong support for greater collaboration among all parties. Strategies to facilitate collaboration reflected a need to: (1) raise awareness of the shared and unique needs of GU cancer survivors and the expertise of cancer advocacy groups, (2) facilitate communication and collaborative opportunities among clinicians/researchers and cancer survivors/advocacy groups, (3) facilitate collaborative programming and fund-raising among GU advocacy groups, and (4) synthesize and facilitate access to GU cancer survivorship resources and services.
There is strong support for formal collaboration to enhance survivorship care among a critical mass of GU cancer survivors, advocacy groups, clinicians, and researchers. Responsibility for collaboration lies with all stakeholder groups. Strategies to foster such partnerships should employ integrated knowledge translation approaches that actively engage all parties throughout the entire research to practice process.
Successful partnerships between cancer survivors, advocacy groups, clinicians, and researchers require familiarity with each other's expertise, along with sufficient resources and organizational structures. GU survivorship advocacy groups need to work more closely together to ensure a strong, unified voice when interacting with clinicians and researchers.
需要新的生存护理模式来满足泌尿生殖系统(GU)癌症幸存者的需求。目前的方法不能有效地使癌症幸存者或倡导团体参与进来。一组临床医生与加拿大泌尿科协会合作,为 GU 癌症幸存者、倡导团体和卫生专业人员举办了一个论坛,探讨如何共同加强生存护理。
与会者参加了为期两天的会议,包括演讲、分组讨论和会后调查。对分组讨论进行了记录,并与开放式调查回复一起进行了分析,以确定共同主题。计算了基本统计数据。
会议参与者(n=42)包括 18 名癌症幸存者/照顾者、21 名卫生专业人员和 3 名代表膀胱癌、肾癌、前列腺癌和睾丸癌团体的研究人员。分组讨论和对会后调查的回复(83.3%的回复率)强烈支持所有各方之间加强合作。促进合作的策略反映了需要:(1)提高对 GU 癌症幸存者的共同和独特需求以及癌症倡导团体的专业知识的认识,(2)促进临床医生/研究人员和癌症幸存者/倡导团体之间的沟通和合作机会,(3)促进 GU 倡导团体之间的合作计划和筹款,以及(4)综合和促进获得 GU 癌症生存资源和服务。
有强烈的支持正式合作,以增强关键数量的 GU 癌症幸存者、倡导团体、临床医生和研究人员的生存护理。合作的责任在于所有利益相关者团体。促进这种伙伴关系的策略应该采用综合知识转化方法,在整个研究到实践过程中积极吸引所有各方。
癌症幸存者、倡导团体、临床医生和研究人员之间的成功伙伴关系需要熟悉彼此的专业知识,以及足够的资源和组织结构。GU 生存倡导团体需要更紧密地合作,以确保在与临床医生和研究人员互动时拥有强大、统一的声音。