兰州大学循证社会科学交叉创新实验室 Innovation Laboratory of Evidence-based Social Sciences,Lanzhou University

Unmet supportive care needs of people with advanced cancer and their caregivers: A systematic scoping review

2022-08

Examining and addressing unmet care needs is integral to improving the provision and quality of cancer services. This review explored the prevalence of unmet supportive care needs, and factors associated with unmet need, in adults with advanced cancers (solid and hematological malignancies) and their caregivers. Electronic databases (PubMed, CINAHL, EMBASE) were searched, producing 85 papers representing 81 included studies. People with advanced cancer reported the highest unmet needs in financial, health system and information, psychological, and physical and daily living domains, whereas caregivers reported the highest unmet needs in psychological, and patient care and support domains. Distress, depression, and anxiety were associated with higher unmet needs across all unmet need domains for people with advanced cancer and their caregivers. Substantial heterogeneity in study populations and methods was observed. Findings from this review can inform targeted strategies and interventions to address these unmet needs in people with advanced cancer.

研究类型
系统评价再评价
人群
混合人群
主题
["医疗服务人员","医疗护理","弱势人群卫生"]
作者
Nicolas H. Hart a b c d; Fiona Crawford-Williams a c; Megan Crichton c e; Jasmine Yee f; Thomas J. Smith g; Bogda Koczwara h i; Margaret I. Fitch j; Gregory B. Crawford k l; Sandip Mukhopadhyay m n; Jane Mahony o; Chan Cheah p q r; James Townsend o; Olivia Cook o s; Meera R. Agar t; Raymond J. Chan a c
国家
Australia
关键词
OncologyHematologyMetastatic cancerNeeds assessmentSurvivorship care
来源期刊
Critical Reviews in Oncology/Hematology
发布日期
2022-08
相关网址
https://www.healthsystemsevidence.org/articles/62fe6fc5ef088708d8e0dbf5-unmet-supportive-care-needs-of-people-with-advanced-cancer-and-their-caregivers-a-systematic-scoping-review?source=doc_export
DOI
10.1016/j.critrevonc.2022.103728
学科领域
DiseasesNon-communicable diseasesCancer