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儿科肿瘤患者家庭在治疗期间及早期生存阶段的经济负担:一项定性分析

Financial toxicity among pediatric oncology families during therapy and early survivorship: a qualitative analysis.

作者信息

Ohlsen Timothy J D, Hale Malika R, Larson Anika J, Jones Salene M W, Wilkinson Fred, Chow Eric J, Ko Linda K, Desai Arti D

机构信息

Cancer and Blood Disorders Center, Seattle Children's Hospital, University of Washington, M/S MB.8.501, 4800 Sand Point Way NE, Seattle, WA, 98105, USA.

Seattle Children's Research Institute, Seattle, WA, USA.

出版信息

Support Care Cancer. 2024 Dec 17;33(1):36. doi: 10.1007/s00520-024-09093-y.

Abstract

PURPOSE

Cancer treatment often results in adverse financial consequences-also termed financial toxicity. To build upon limited research in pediatric oncology, we conducted a qualitative study exploring families' lived experiences with financial toxicity and their perspectives on potential mitigation strategies.

METHODS

We conducted in-depth semi-structured interviews with a purposive sample of English- and Spanish-speaking family caregivers, 3-24 months following diagnosis. We performed a thematic analysis focused on elucidating relationships between components/domains of financial toxicity, identifying mitigating and exacerbating factors, eliciting latent constructs for measurement, and querying caregivers' perspectives on interventions. We organized relationships between themes into a framework to compare with prior theoretically derived models.

RESULTS

We interviewed 21 caregivers, diverse with respect to income, age, race and ethnicity, family structure/composition, and patient characteristics. We identified four themes relating to financial toxicity: increased spending on providing care to patients/siblings, reduced income due to challenges in maintaining employment, new or worsened material hardship, and heightened psychological distress regarding finances. We also identified an additional theme pertaining to response behaviors directed at managing financial toxicity, with helpful or harmful downstream effects. Factors that exacerbated or lessened financial toxicity included awareness of resources, geography, and community. Caregivers suggested potential mitigation strategies, including proactive education and resource provision.

CONCLUSION

Pediatric patients and families can experience substantial financial impacts, which may differ from experiences of adults with cancer. These findings suggest a need for careful screening and measurement, as well as family-centered interventions and policies to reduce long-term consequences.

摘要

目的

癌症治疗常常会导致不良的经济后果,也被称为经济毒性。为了在儿科肿瘤学有限研究的基础上进一步开展工作,我们进行了一项定性研究,探讨家庭在经济毒性方面的实际经历以及他们对潜在缓解策略的看法。

方法

我们对确诊后3至24个月的讲英语和西班牙语的家庭照顾者进行了有目的抽样的深入半结构化访谈。我们进行了主题分析,重点是阐明经济毒性各组成部分/领域之间的关系,确定缓解和加剧因素,引出潜在的测量结构,并询问照顾者对干预措施的看法。我们将主题之间的关系组织成一个框架,以便与先前从理论推导得出的模型进行比较。

结果

我们采访了21名照顾者,他们在收入、年龄、种族和族裔、家庭结构/组成以及患者特征方面各不相同。我们确定了与经济毒性相关的四个主题:在照顾患者/兄弟姐妹方面的支出增加、由于维持就业面临挑战导致收入减少、新出现或更严重的物质困难以及对财务状况的心理困扰加剧。我们还确定了一个与应对经济毒性的行为相关的额外主题,这些行为会产生有益或有害的下游影响。加剧或减轻经济毒性的因素包括对资源的了解、地理位置和社区。照顾者提出了潜在的缓解策略,包括积极的教育和资源提供。

结论

儿科患者及其家庭可能会经历重大的经济影响,这可能与成年癌症患者的经历不同。这些发现表明需要进行仔细的筛查和测量,以及以家庭为中心的干预措施和政策,以减少长期后果。

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