Barriers and facilitators to integrated cancer care between primary and secondary care: a scoping review
Barriers and facilitators to integrated cancer care between primary and secondary care: a scoping review
Purpose: this scoping review identifies and characterises reported barriers and facilitators to providing integrated cancer care reported in the international literature, and develops recommendations for clinical practice.
Methods: this scoping review included literature published between 2009 and 2022 and describes the delivery of integrated cancer care between primary and secondary care sectors. Searches were conducted of an online database Ovid Medline and grey literature.
Results: the review included thirty-two papers. Barriers and facilitators to integrated cancer care were identified in three core areas: (1) at an individual user level around patient-healthcare professional interactions, (2) at an organisational level, and (3) at a healthcare system level. The review findings identified a need for further training for primary care professionals on cancer care, clarity in the delineation of primary care and oncologist roles (i.e. who does what), effective communication and engagement between primary and secondary care, and the provision of protocols and guidelines for follow-up care in cancer.
Conclusions: information sharing and communication between primary and secondary care must improve to meet the increasing demand for support for people living with and beyond cancer. Delivering integrated pathways between primary and secondary care will yield improvements in patient outcomes and health economic costs.
Cancer, Health services research, Integrated care, Models of care, Personalised care, Scoping review
Collaço, Nicole
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Lippiett, Kate A.
35184a9f-cf3c-49cc-ae6b-7b92f6ead7ee
Wright, David
a55be721-4b15-4555-bf61-73fcb75c1a39
Brodie, Hazel
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Winter, Jane
05cb0a58-cc4f-471c-a268-c1d97de9719e
Richardson, Alison
3db30680-aa47-43a5-b54d-62d10ece17b7
Foster, Claire
00786ac1-bd47-4aeb-a0e2-40e058695b73
22 January 2024
Collaço, Nicole
d7a41227-8aa4-4bbb-a380-980824736945
Lippiett, Kate A.
35184a9f-cf3c-49cc-ae6b-7b92f6ead7ee
Wright, David
a55be721-4b15-4555-bf61-73fcb75c1a39
Brodie, Hazel
bf47d6a9-8fbe-4a1c-ace5-6487293d8321
Winter, Jane
05cb0a58-cc4f-471c-a268-c1d97de9719e
Richardson, Alison
3db30680-aa47-43a5-b54d-62d10ece17b7
Foster, Claire
00786ac1-bd47-4aeb-a0e2-40e058695b73
Collaço, Nicole, Lippiett, Kate A., Wright, David, Brodie, Hazel, Winter, Jane, Richardson, Alison and Foster, Claire
(2024)
Barriers and facilitators to integrated cancer care between primary and secondary care: a scoping review.
Supportive Care in Cancer, 32 (2), [120].
(doi:10.1007/s00520-023-08278-1).
Abstract
Purpose: this scoping review identifies and characterises reported barriers and facilitators to providing integrated cancer care reported in the international literature, and develops recommendations for clinical practice.
Methods: this scoping review included literature published between 2009 and 2022 and describes the delivery of integrated cancer care between primary and secondary care sectors. Searches were conducted of an online database Ovid Medline and grey literature.
Results: the review included thirty-two papers. Barriers and facilitators to integrated cancer care were identified in three core areas: (1) at an individual user level around patient-healthcare professional interactions, (2) at an organisational level, and (3) at a healthcare system level. The review findings identified a need for further training for primary care professionals on cancer care, clarity in the delineation of primary care and oncologist roles (i.e. who does what), effective communication and engagement between primary and secondary care, and the provision of protocols and guidelines for follow-up care in cancer.
Conclusions: information sharing and communication between primary and secondary care must improve to meet the increasing demand for support for people living with and beyond cancer. Delivering integrated pathways between primary and secondary care will yield improvements in patient outcomes and health economic costs.
Text
CNAB scoping review clean copy
- Accepted Manuscript
Text
s00520-023-08278-1 (1)
- Version of Record
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 18 December 2023
e-pub ahead of print date: 22 January 2024
Published date: 22 January 2024
Additional Information:
Publisher Copyright:
© 2024, The Author(s).
Keywords:
Cancer, Health services research, Integrated care, Models of care, Personalised care, Scoping review
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 486477
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/486477
ISSN: 0941-4355
PURE UUID: 13324b6e-a0e8-4c99-8c86-16bbd7e3e07b
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Date deposited: 24 Jan 2024 17:33
Last modified: 12 Apr 2024 01:57
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Contributors
Author:
Hazel Brodie
Author:
Jane Winter
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