Interprofessional follow-up of patients with cancer in France (the SINPATIC study): a preliminary, qualitative study of the patient's perspective

被引:0
作者
Mirat, William [1 ,5 ]
Moscova, Laura [1 ]
Lustman, Matthieu [1 ]
Dawidowicz, Sebastien [1 ]
Picot, Genevieve [2 ]
Lebel, Audrey [3 ]
Cittee, Jacques [1 ]
Ferrat, Emilie [1 ,4 ]
机构
[1] Univ Paris Est Creteil UPEC, Fac Medecine, Dept Med Gen, Creteil, France
[2] AP HP, Ctr Format & Dev Competences, Paris, France
[3] Univ Paris Est Creteil UPEC, Henri Mondor Hosp, AP HP, Dept Oncol Med, Creteil, France
[4] Univ Paris Est Creteil, IMRB CEpiA Team, INSERM, Creteil, France
[5] Univ Paris Est UPEC, Fac Med, Dept Med Gen, 8 Rue Gen Sarrail, F-94010 Creteil, France
关键词
cancer; care coordination; care pathway; general practitioner; patient; shared-care; GENERAL-PRACTITIONER; FAMILY PHYSICIANS; CARE; SIDE; CHEMOTHERAPY; CONTINUITY; MODEL; LIFE; END;
D O I
10.1093/fampra/cmae023
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
Background In 2020, 19.2 million people were diagnosed with cancer, and nearly 10 million cancer patients died worldwide. An effective cancer care pathway must be based on coordination, multidisciplinarity, a personalized approach, and collaboration between stakeholders. Follow-up can be improved by good collaboration and communication between GPs and the cancer care team at a common level of organization.Objectives To study patients with solid cancers and assess their perceptions of the care pathway, the roles of the healthcare professionals involved, and interprofessional collaboration.Methods In a preliminary, qualitative study (part of the SINPATIC study of general practitioners, oncologists, nurses, and patients), adult patients with cancer in the Paris area of France were interviewed between January and April 2018. Using purposive sampling, 10 patients were recruited from hospital departments and primary care. An interview guide explored 3 themes: the care pathway, the stakeholders' roles in follow-up, and interprofessional collaboration.Results For patients, dealing with cancer is a complex process of awareness, care provision, decision-making, task assignment, a lack of clarification of professional roles, a piecemeal announcement of the diagnosis of cancer by several stakeholders, organizational and administrative difficulties, non-formal collaboration in inertia (tending towards collaboration under construction), and with cancer follow-up that was usually parallel, sometimes shared, rarely sequential.Conclusion This SINPATIC substudy provided us a better understanding of the complexity of the patient care pathway. Looking forward, the present findings might stimulate thoughts on the design and development of interventional studies.
引用
收藏
页码:781 / 789
页数:9
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