Nutrition & Speech Pathology Department, Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre, 305 Grattan Street, Melbourne, VIC, 3000, Australia.
School of Exercise and Nutrition Sciences, Deakin University, Deakin, VIC, Australia.
Support Care Cancer. 2024 Apr 1;32(4):257. doi: 10.1007/s00520-024-08453-y.
Nutrition is essential within cancer care, yet patient and carer access to nutrition care and information is variable. This study aimed to (1) investigate patient and carer access and perceptions, and health professional views and practices, relating to cancer nutrition information and care; and (2) co-design interactive resources to support optimal nutrition care.
Patients and carers completed a survey regarding access to nutrition care and information. Seven multidisciplinary health service teams were invited to participate in a survey and focus group to assess barriers and enablers in nutrition practices. Focus groups were recorded, transcribed and thematically analyzed. Eligible patients, carers, and health professionals were invited to four virtual workshops utilizing experience-based co-design methods to identify nutrition priority areas and design resources. Workshop participant acceptability of the resources was measured.
Of 104 consumer survey respondents (n = 97 patients, n = 7 carers), 61% agreed that it "took too much time to find evidence-based nutrition and cancer information", and 46% had seen a dietitian. Thirty-four of 38 health professionals completed the survey and 30 participated in a focus group, and it was identified the greatest barriers to delivering nutrition care were lack of referral services, knowledge or skill gaps, and time. Twenty participants (n = 10 patients and carers, n = 10 health professionals) attended four workshops and co-designed a suite of 46 novel resources rated as highly acceptable.
Improved communication, training, and availability of suitable resources could improve access to and support cancer nutrition information and care. New, co-designed cancer nutrition resources were created and deemed highly acceptable to patients, carers, and health professionals.
营养在癌症护理中至关重要,但患者和照护者获取营养护理和信息的机会和途径各不相同。本研究旨在:(1) 调查患者和照护者获取和认知癌症营养信息和护理的情况,以及卫生专业人员的看法和做法;(2) 共同设计互动资源以支持最佳营养护理。
患者和照护者完成了一份关于获取营养护理和信息的调查。邀请了 7 个多学科卫生服务团队参加调查和焦点小组,以评估营养实践中的障碍和促进因素。焦点小组的录音被转录并进行了主题分析。邀请符合条件的患者、照护者和卫生专业人员参加了 4 次虚拟研讨会,利用基于经验的共同设计方法确定营养优先领域并设计资源。测量了研讨会参与者对资源的可接受性。
在 104 名消费者调查受访者中(n=97 名患者,n=7 名照护者),61%的人同意“花太多时间寻找基于证据的营养和癌症信息”,46%的人看过营养师。38 名卫生专业人员中有 34 名完成了调查,30 名参加了焦点小组,发现提供营养护理的最大障碍是缺乏转介服务、知识或技能差距以及时间。20 名参与者(n=10 名患者和照护者,n=10 名卫生专业人员)参加了 4 次研讨会,并共同设计了一套 46 种新颖的资源,评价非常高。
改善沟通、培训和提供合适的资源可以提高获取和支持癌症营养信息和护理的机会。新的共同设计的癌症营养资源已经创建并被患者、照护者和卫生专业人员认为非常容易接受。