Improving Palliative, Aged and Chronic Care through Clinical Research and Translation (IMPACCT), Faculty of Health, University of Technology Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
Faculty of Health, University of Technology Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
BMC Palliat Care. 2021 Jan 23;20(1):22. doi: 10.1186/s12904-021-00715-4.
A primary brain cancer diagnosis is a distressing, life changing event. It adversely affects the quality of life for the person living with brain cancer and their families ('carers'). Timely access to evidence-based information is critical to enabling people living with brain cancer, and their carers, to self-manage the devastating impacts of this disease.
A systematic environmental scan of web-based resources. A depersonalised search for online English-language resources published from 2009 to December 2019 and designed for adults (> 25 years of age), living with primary brain cancer, was undertaken using the Google search engine. The online information was classified according to: 1) the step on the cancer care continuum; 2) self-management domains (PRISMS taxonomy); 3) basic information disclosure (Silberg criteria); 4) independent quality verification (HonCode); 5) reliability of disease and treatment information (DISCERN Sections 1 and 2); and readability (Flesch-Kincaid reading grade).
A total of 119 online resources were identified, most originating in England (n = 49); Australia (n = 27); or the USA (n = 27). The majority of resources related to active treatment (n = 76), without addressing recurrence (n = 3), survivorship (n = 1) or palliative care needs (n = 13). Few online resources directly provided self-management advice for adults living with brain cancer or their carers. Just over a fifth (n = 26, 22%) were underpinned by verifiable evidence. Only one quarter of organisations producing resources were HonCode certified (n = 9, 24%). The median resource reliability as measured by Section 1, DISCERN tool, was 56%. A median of 8.8 years of education was required to understand these online resources.
More targeted online information is needed to provide people affected by brain cancer with practical self-management advice. Resources need to better address patient and carer needs related to: rehabilitation, managing behavioural changes, survivorship and living with uncertainty; recurrence; and transition to palliative care. Developing online resources that don't require a high level of literacy and/or cognition are also required.
原发性脑癌的诊断是一个令人痛苦的、改变生活的事件。它对患有脑癌的患者及其家属(“照顾者”)的生活质量产生了不利影响。及时获得基于证据的信息对于使患有脑癌的患者及其照顾者能够自我管理这种疾病的破坏性影响至关重要。
对基于网络的资源进行系统的环境扫描。使用谷歌搜索引擎对 2009 年至 2019 年 12 月期间发布的、面向年龄在 25 岁以上的成年人、患有原发性脑癌的在线英语资源进行非个性化搜索。根据以下内容对在线信息进行分类:1)癌症护理连续体的阶段;2)自我管理领域(PRISMS 分类法);3)基本信息披露(Silberg 标准);4)独立质量验证(HonCode);5)疾病和治疗信息的可靠性(DISCERN 第 1 节和第 2 节);6)可读性(Flesch-Kincaid 阅读年级)。
共确定了 119 个在线资源,其中大多数来自英国(n=49);澳大利亚(n=27);或美国(n=27)。大多数资源与积极治疗有关(n=76),但没有涉及复发(n=3)、生存(n=1)或姑息治疗需求(n=13)。很少有在线资源直接为患有脑癌的成年患者及其照顾者提供自我管理建议。只有略多于五分之一(n=26,22%)的资源有可验证的证据支持。只有四分之一的资源制作组织获得了 HonCode 认证(n=9,24%)。使用 DISCERN 工具的第 1 节衡量,资源的平均可靠性为 56%。理解这些在线资源平均需要 8.8 年的教育。
需要更有针对性的在线信息,为脑癌患者提供实用的自我管理建议。资源需要更好地满足患者和照顾者与以下方面相关的需求:康复、行为改变管理、生存和不确定性应对;复发;以及向姑息治疗过渡。还需要开发不需要高识字率和/或认知能力的在线资源。