Maillie Luke, Masalu Nestory, Mafwimbo Judy, Maxmilian Mastidia, Schroeder Kristin
Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY.
Department of Oncology, Bugando Medical Centre, Mwanza, Tanzania.
JCO Glob Oncol. 2020 Nov;6:1757-1765. doi: 10.1200/GO.20.00407.
It is estimated that 50%-80% of patients with pediatric cancer in sub-Saharan Africa present at an advanced stage. Delays can occur at any time during the care-seeking process from symptom onset to treatment initiation. Referral delay, the time from first presentation at a health facility to oncologist evaluation, is a key component of total delay that has not been evaluated in sub-Saharan Africa.
Over a 3-month period, caregivers of children diagnosed with cancer at a regional cancer center (Bugando Medical Centre [BMC]) in Tanzania were consecutively surveyed to determine the number and type of health facilities visited before presentation, interventions received, and transportation used to reach each facility.
Forty-nine caregivers were consented and included in the review. A total of 124 facilities were visited before BMC, with 31% of visits (n = 38) resulting in a referral. The median referral delay was 89 days (mean, 122 days), with a median of two facilities (mean, 2.5 facilities) visited before presentation to BMC. Visiting a traditional healer first significantly increased the time taken to reach BMC compared with starting at a health center/dispensary (103 236 days; = .02). Facility visits in which a patient received a referral to a higher-level facility led to significantly decreased time to reach BMC ( < .0001). Only 36% of visits to district hospitals and 20.6% of visits to health centers/dispensaries yielded a referral, however.
The majority of patients were delayed during the referral process, but receipt of a referral to a higher-level facility significantly shortened delay time. Referral delay for pediatric patients with cancer could be decreased by raising awareness of cancer and strengthening the referral process from lower-level to higher-level facilities.
据估计,撒哈拉以南非洲地区50%-80%的儿童癌症患者就诊时已处于晚期。从症状出现到开始治疗的整个就医过程中随时都可能出现延误。转诊延误是指从首次在医疗机构就诊到肿瘤学家评估的时间,是总延误的一个关键组成部分,在撒哈拉以南非洲地区尚未得到评估。
在3个月的时间里,对坦桑尼亚一家地区癌症中心(布甘多医疗中心[BMC])诊断为癌症的儿童的照料者进行连续调查,以确定就诊前去过的医疗机构的数量和类型、接受的干预措施以及前往每个机构所使用的交通工具。
49名照料者同意参与并纳入此次评估。在前往BMC之前,总共走访了124家机构,其中31%(n = 38)的走访导致了转诊。转诊延误的中位数为89天(平均为122天),在前往BMC就诊之前,走访的机构中位数为两家(平均为2.5家)。与从健康中心/诊所开始就诊相比,首先拜访传统治疗师会显著增加抵达BMC所需的时间(103±236天;P = 0.02)。患者获得转诊到更高层级机构的机构走访会使抵达BMC的时间显著减少(P < 0.000)。然而,只有36%的地区医院就诊和20.6%的健康中心/诊所就诊产生了转诊。
大多数患者在转诊过程中出现延误,但获得转诊到更高层级机构显著缩短了延误时间。提高对癌症的认识并加强从较低层级机构到较高层级机构的转诊流程,可以减少癌症患儿的转诊延误。