Matthews Elizabeth, Webber Kate, Wiley Joshua F, Parker Catriona
Faculty of Medicine, Nursing and Health Sciences, School of Psychological Sciences, Monash University, Clayton, Australia.
Oncology Department, Monash Health, Clayton, Australia.
Psychooncology. 2025 Jun;34(6):e70206. doi: 10.1002/pon.70206.
Mental health challenges are common in individuals with cancer, but accessing support remains a gap, particularly in outpatient oncology. Real-world factors influencing staff's ability to integrate mental health assessment and support into workflows are unclear. We aimed to (1) identify and explore factors influencing the assessment and management of mental health in outpatient oncology and (2) identify factors that influence normalising support for mental health during cancer treatment.
Through an exploratory qualitative approach, data was collected via focus groups with oncology healthcare professionals at a major metropolitan hospital. Reflexive thematic analysis revealed seven themes.
Staff recognised the critical need for mental health support during treatment. However, staff participation in mental health assessment and referral processes was impeded by feelings of futility due to the lack of available oncology-specific services. Staff reported insufficient resources and time constraints, and reliance on experiential knowledge rather than the preferred support from clinicians with mental health training. Staff highlighted inequities in access to mental health support which exacerbate disparities in care provision. Staff reported that a lack of role clarity and responsibilities hindered monitoring of patient mental health management and contributed to a perceived lack of accountability. Short-term initiatives such as improved documentation, creation of central referral pathways and clinical supervision for all staff were reported as desirable.
While systemic resource constraints were acknowledged, oncology staff also identified several feasible, shorter-term initiatives they felt would be helpful and desirable until mental health professionals can be integrated into oncology outpatient care.
心理健康问题在癌症患者中很常见,但获得支持仍然存在差距,尤其是在门诊肿瘤学领域。影响工作人员将心理健康评估和支持纳入工作流程能力的现实因素尚不清楚。我们旨在(1)识别和探索影响门诊肿瘤学中心理健康评估和管理的因素,以及(2)识别影响癌症治疗期间心理健康支持常态化的因素。
通过探索性定性方法,通过与一家大型都市医院的肿瘤医疗专业人员进行焦点小组收集数据。反思性主题分析揭示了七个主题。
工作人员认识到治疗期间对心理健康支持的迫切需求。然而,由于缺乏专门针对肿瘤学的可用服务,工作人员感到徒劳无功,这阻碍了他们参与心理健康评估和转诊过程。工作人员报告资源不足和时间限制,并且依赖经验知识而非接受过心理健康培训的临床医生提供的首选支持。工作人员强调在获得心理健康支持方面存在不平等现象,这加剧了护理提供方面的差异。工作人员报告说,角色不明确和责任不清阻碍了对患者心理健康管理的监测,并导致人们认为缺乏问责制。据报告,诸如改进文档记录、创建中央转诊途径以及对所有工作人员进行临床监督等短期举措是可取的。
虽然认识到系统性资源限制,但肿瘤学工作人员也确定了一些可行的短期举措,他们认为在心理健康专业人员能够融入肿瘤门诊护理之前,这些举措将是有帮助的且可取的。