Schilstra Clarissa E, Sansom-Daly Ursula M, Ellis Sarah J, Trahair Toby N, Anazodo Antoinette C, Amiruddin Azhani, Lindsay Toni, Maguire Fiona, Wakefield Claire E, Lah Suncica, Bland Elizabeth, Lenthen Kate, Rifkin Allison, Awan Adry, Kittos Tiana, Hanbury Nell, Tsalidis Sofia, Patterson Pandora, McDonald Fiona, Fardell Joanna E
School of Clinical Medicine, Faculty of Medicine and Health, UNSW Sydney, Kensington, Australia.
Kids Cancer Centre, Sydney Children's Hospital, Randwick, Australia.
J Adolesc Young Adult Oncol. 2024 Feb;13(1):8-29. doi: 10.1089/jayao.2023.0027. Epub 2023 Jun 27.
More than 1000 Australian adolescents and young adults (AYAs) are diagnosed with cancer annually. Many report unmet social well-being needs, which impact their mental health. Australian AYA cancer care providers lack guidance to address these needs well. We aimed to develop guidelines for caring for the social well-being of AYAs with cancer in Australia. Following the Australian National Health and Medical Research Council guidance, we formed a multidisciplinary working group ( = 4 psychosocial researchers, = 4 psychologists, = 4 AYA cancer survivors, = 2 oncologists, = 2 nurses, and = 2 social workers), defined the scope of the guidelines, gathered evidence via a systematic review, graded the evidence, and surveyed AYA cancer care providers about the feasibility and acceptability of the guidelines. The guidelines recommend which AYAs should have their social well-being assessed, who should lead that assessment, when assessment should occur with which tools/measures, and how clinicians can address AYAs' social well-being concerns. A key clinician, who is knowledgeable about AYAs' developmental needs, should lead the assessment of social well-being during and after cancer treatment. The AYA Psycho-Oncology Screening Tool is recommended to screen for social well-being needs. The HEADSSS Assessment (Home, Education/Employment, Eating/Exercise, Activities/Peer Relationships, Drug use, Sexuality, Suicidality/Depression, Safety/Spirituality Assessment) can be used for in-depth assessment of social well-being, while the Social Phobia Inventory can be used to assess social anxiety. AYA cancer care providers rated the guidelines as highly acceptable, but discussed many feasibility barriers. These guidelines provide an optimal care pathway for the social well-being of AYAs with cancer. Future research addressing implementation is critical to meet AYAs' social well-being needs.
澳大利亚每年有超过1000名青少年和青年(AYA)被诊断患有癌症。许多人报告说社会福祉需求未得到满足,这对他们的心理健康产生了影响。澳大利亚AYA癌症护理提供者缺乏妥善解决这些需求的指导。我们旨在制定澳大利亚癌症AYA社会福祉护理指南。遵循澳大利亚国家卫生与医学研究委员会的指导,我们成立了一个多学科工作组(4名心理社会研究人员、4名心理学家、4名AYA癌症幸存者、2名肿瘤学家、2名护士和2名社会工作者),确定了指南的范围,通过系统评价收集证据,对证据进行分级,并就指南的可行性和可接受性对AYA癌症护理提供者进行了调查。该指南建议哪些AYA应接受社会福祉评估、应由谁领导该评估、应在何时使用哪些工具/措施进行评估,以及临床医生如何解决AYA的社会福祉问题。一名了解AYA发展需求的关键临床医生应在癌症治疗期间和之后领导社会福祉评估。建议使用AYA心理肿瘤筛查工具筛查社会福祉需求。HEADSSS评估(家庭、教育/就业、饮食/锻炼、活动/同伴关系、药物使用、性取向、自杀/抑郁、安全/精神评估)可用于社会福祉的深入评估,而社交恐惧症量表可用于评估社交焦虑。AYA癌症护理提供者对该指南的评价很高,但也讨论了许多可行性障碍。这些指南为癌症AYA的社会福祉提供了最佳护理途径。未来针对实施情况的研究对于满足AYA的社会福祉需求至关重要。