Tarver Willi L, Justice Zion, Jonnalagadda Pallavi, Rahurkar Saurabh, Obeng-Gyasi Samilia, Krok-Schoen Jessica L, Petrecca Abigail, Paskett Electra D
James Comprehensive Cancer Center, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, USA.
Division of Cancer Prevention and Control, Department of Internal Medicine, College of Medicine, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, USA.
J Cancer Surviv. 2024 Jun 22. doi: 10.1007/s11764-024-01609-z.
Despite recent advances in cancer control and the number of cancer survivors increasing substantially over the past years, some cancer survivors continue to experience disparities due to barriers to recommended survivorship care. The use of survivorship care plans (SCPs) may be a way to help care for these individuals and their respective issues after they complete their primary treatment. The purpose of this scoping review is to understand the evidence on SCPs among minority, rural, and low-income populations: groups that experience disproportionately poorer cancer health outcomes.
Computer-based searches were conducted in four academic databases. We included peer-reviewed studies published in the English language and conducted in the USA. We systematically extracted information from each paper meeting our inclusion criteria.
Our search identified 45 articles. The 4 major themes identified were (1) disparities in the receipt of SCPs where populations experience unmet needs; (2) benefits of SCPs, including improved care coordination and self-management of cancer; (3) needs and preferences for survivorship care; and (4) barriers and facilitators to using SCPs.
Despite the potential benefits, underserved cancer survivors experience disparities in the receipt of SCPs and continue to have unmet needs in their survivorship care. Survivorship care may benefit from a risk-stratified approach where SCPs are prioritized to survivors belonging to high-risk groups.
SCPs are a tool to deliver quality care for cancer survivors. While evidence is mixed on SCPs' benefits among the general population, SCPs show promise for underserved populations when it comes to proximal outcomes that contribute to disparities.
尽管近年来癌症控制取得了进展,且癌症幸存者的数量在过去几年中大幅增加,但一些癌症幸存者由于推荐的生存护理存在障碍,仍面临差异。使用生存护理计划(SCP)可能是一种帮助这些个体及其在完成初始治疗后各自问题的护理方式。本范围综述的目的是了解少数族裔、农村和低收入人群(这些人群的癌症健康结果不成比例地更差)中关于SCP的证据。
在四个学术数据库中进行基于计算机的检索。我们纳入了以英文发表且在美国进行的同行评审研究。我们系统地从每篇符合纳入标准的论文中提取信息。
我们的检索识别出45篇文章。确定的4个主要主题是:(1)接受SCP方面的差异,即人群存在未满足的需求;(2)SCP的益处,包括改善护理协调和癌症自我管理;(3)生存护理的需求和偏好;(4)使用SCP的障碍和促进因素。
尽管有潜在益处,但未得到充分服务的癌症幸存者在接受SCP方面存在差异,并且在其生存护理方面仍有未满足的需求。生存护理可能受益于风险分层方法,即优先为属于高风险组的幸存者提供SCP。
SCP是为癌症幸存者提供优质护理的一种工具。虽然关于SCP在一般人群中的益处的证据不一,但在涉及导致差异的近端结果方面,SCP对未得到充分服务的人群显示出前景。