Editorial: personalised multimodal prehabilitation in cancer
Editorial: personalised multimodal prehabilitation in cancer
Multimodality prehabilitation is a complex intervention that can enhance fitness, nutrition, and psychological resilience, with emerging evidence showing an improvement in perioperative and oncological outcomes (1). Personalised prehabilitation also has the potential to meet the widely adopted triple aim of health care: improving individuals’ experience of care, improving population health, and providing value for money to the taxpayer (2). The contemporary prehabilitation model has adopted a multimodal approach, which attempts to address complex needs in patients having complex treatment pathways. Multimodal prehabilitation incorporates intervention components specifically selected for their potential synergistic effects on health outcomes. Prehabilitation enables people with cancer prepare for treatment through promoting healthy behaviours and through needs-based prescribing of exercise, nutrition, and psychological interventions, aiming to empower patients to maximise resilience to treatment and improve long-term health outcomes (3). In this Research Topic entitled ‘Personalised Multimodal Prehabilitation in Cancer’ a collection of articles demonstrate how prehabilitation is now regarded as an integral part of a continuum spanning from cancer diagnosis to rehabilitation.
cancer, multimodal prehabilitation, multiphasic prehabilitation, personalised, prehabiltiation
West, M. A.
98b67e58-9875-4133-b236-8a10a0a12c04
Carli, F.
0d1673ce-7f2b-490c-b5ce-5b86faac0bb5
Grocott, M. P.W.
1e87b741-513e-4a22-be13-0f7bb344e8c2
23 November 2022
West, M. A.
98b67e58-9875-4133-b236-8a10a0a12c04
Carli, F.
0d1673ce-7f2b-490c-b5ce-5b86faac0bb5
Grocott, M. P.W.
1e87b741-513e-4a22-be13-0f7bb344e8c2
West, M. A., Carli, F. and Grocott, M. P.W.
(2022)
Editorial: personalised multimodal prehabilitation in cancer.
Frontiers in Oncology, 12, [1086739].
(doi:10.3389/fonc.2022.1086739).
Abstract
Multimodality prehabilitation is a complex intervention that can enhance fitness, nutrition, and psychological resilience, with emerging evidence showing an improvement in perioperative and oncological outcomes (1). Personalised prehabilitation also has the potential to meet the widely adopted triple aim of health care: improving individuals’ experience of care, improving population health, and providing value for money to the taxpayer (2). The contemporary prehabilitation model has adopted a multimodal approach, which attempts to address complex needs in patients having complex treatment pathways. Multimodal prehabilitation incorporates intervention components specifically selected for their potential synergistic effects on health outcomes. Prehabilitation enables people with cancer prepare for treatment through promoting healthy behaviours and through needs-based prescribing of exercise, nutrition, and psychological interventions, aiming to empower patients to maximise resilience to treatment and improve long-term health outcomes (3). In this Research Topic entitled ‘Personalised Multimodal Prehabilitation in Cancer’ a collection of articles demonstrate how prehabilitation is now regarded as an integral part of a continuum spanning from cancer diagnosis to rehabilitation.
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 8 November 2022
Published date: 23 November 2022
Keywords:
cancer, multimodal prehabilitation, multiphasic prehabilitation, personalised, prehabiltiation
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 473789
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/473789
ISSN: 2234-943X
PURE UUID: d72e0ed8-9b87-402d-8457-aec5f6f0971b
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Date deposited: 31 Jan 2023 17:50
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:46
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Author:
F. Carli
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