Gopal Dipesh P, Taylor Stephanie Jc, Guo Ping, Efstathiou Nikolaos
Centre for Primary Care, Wolfson Institute of Population Health, Barts and the London School of Medicine and Dentistry, Queen Mary University of London, London, UK
Centre for Primary Care, Wolfson Institute of Population Health, Barts and the London School of Medicine and Dentistry, Queen Mary University of London, London, UK.
BJGP Open. 2025 Apr 24;9(1). doi: 10.3399/BJGPO.2024.0064. Print 2025 Apr.
The number of people who are living with and beyond cancer is increasing in England. Primary care delivers cancer care via structured proactive conversations which are incentivised through the Quality and Outcomes Framework (QoF): 'cancer care reviews' (CCRs). Declining workforce numbers, increasing patient demand, CCR policy changes in 2020, and the onset of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic motivate exploration of how staff deliver CCRs.
To explore primary care staff's experiences with CCRs, their view of CCRs, how they conduct CCRs, and their perception of the value of CCRs.
DESIGN & SETTING: Descriptive qualitative study in general practices in England.
Semi-structured online interviews with 15 primary care staff; data analysis using reflexive thematic analysis.
Four themes were identified: varied and evolving perception of cancer; the delivery and impact of CCRs; changes to CCR delivery during the COVID-19 pandemic; and ways to complement CCRs. Primary care staff felt that the way that cancer was perceived by patients, including those from ethnic minority backgrounds, impacted how CCRs were delivered. Cancer care involved acknowledging the challenge of a cancer diagnosis, helping decode jargon, and addressing unmet care needs. The pandemic resulted in remote CCR delivery for some practices. Staff suggested that community cancer teams could provide cancer care alongside existing services.
Staff adopted the new 3- and 12-month format CCRs despite the COVID-19 pandemic. Clinical staff may benefit from better training on cancer as a long-term condition and how cancer is perceived by people from diverse ethnic backgrounds.
在英格兰,癌症幸存者及癌症康复者的数量正在增加。基层医疗通过结构化的主动沟通提供癌症护理,这种沟通通过质量与结果框架(QoF)中的“癌症护理审查”(CCR)得到激励。劳动力数量下降、患者需求增加、2020年CCR政策变化以及2019冠状病毒病(COVID-19)大流行的爆发促使人们探索工作人员如何开展CCR。
探讨基层医疗人员在CCR方面的经历、他们对CCR的看法、他们开展CCR的方式以及他们对CCR价值的认知。
在英格兰的全科诊所进行描述性定性研究。
对15名基层医疗人员进行半结构化在线访谈;使用反思性主题分析进行数据分析。
确定了四个主题:对癌症的不同且不断演变的认知;CCR的实施与影响;COVID-19大流行期间CCR实施的变化;以及补充CCR的方法。基层医疗人员认为,患者(包括少数族裔背景的患者)对癌症的认知方式影响了CCR的实施方式。癌症护理包括承认癌症诊断带来的挑战、帮助解读专业术语以及满足未得到满足的护理需求。大流行导致一些诊所采用远程CCR。工作人员建议社区癌症团队可以在现有服务的基础上提供癌症护理。
尽管有COVID-19大流行,工作人员仍采用了新的3个月和12个月格式的CCR。临床工作人员可能会从关于将癌症视为一种慢性病以及不同族裔背景的人对癌症的认知的更好培训中受益。