| Literature DB >> 29896450 |
Neo M Tapela1,2, Michael J Peluso2,3, Racquel E Kohler4, Irene I Setlhako5, Kerapetse Botebele1, Kemiso Gabegwe1, Isaac Nkele1, Mohan Narasimhamurthy6, Mompati Mmalane1, Surbhi Grover7,8, Tomer Barak1,9, Lawrence N Shulman10, Shahin Lockman1,11,12, Scott Dryden-Peterson1,11,12.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Health system delays in diagnosis of cancer contribute to the glaring disparities in cancer mortality between high-income countries and low- and middle-income countries. In Botswana, approximately 70% of cancers are diagnosed at late stage and median time from first health facility visit for cancer-related symptoms to specialty cancer care was 160 days (IQR 59-653). We describe the implementation and early outcomes of training targeting primary care providers, which is a part of a multi-component implementation study in Kweneng-East district aiming to enhance timely diagnosis of cancers.Entities:
Keywords: Botswana; cancer early diagnosis; health system delays; primary care; primary care providers; sub-Saharan Africa; training
Year: 2018 PMID: 29896450 PMCID: PMC5986942 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2018.00187
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1Map of Botswana and Kweneng-East district.
Pre- and posttest scores, by domain and subdomain.
| Pretest | Posttest | |
|---|---|---|
| Total score* | 68.0 (12.0) | 84.0 (12.0) |
| Knowledge*** | 69.2 (15.4) | 84.6 (15.4) |
| Epidemiology* | 100.0 (0.0) | 100.0 (0.0) |
| Pathophysiology* | 75.0 (50.0) | 75.0 (25.0) |
| Social context*** | 75.0 (25.0) | 75.0 (25.0) |
| Symptoms*** | 66.7 (33.3) | 100.0 (33.3) |
| Management*** | 66.7 (16.7) | 83.3 (8.3) |
| Evaluation*** | 66.7 (0.0) | 100.0 (0.0) |
| Documentation*** | 66.7 (33.3) | 100.0 (0.0) |
| Treatment | 66.7 (33.3) | 66.7 (33.3) |
| Follow-up** | 33.3 (33.3) | 66.7 (33.3) |
| Total score | 64.0 (20.0) | 88.0 (12.0) |
| Knowledge*** | 66.7 (16.7) | 91.7 (16.7) |
| Epidemiology*** | 100.0 (50.0) | 100.0 (0.0) |
| Pathophysiology*** | 66.7 (66.7) | 66.7 (33.3) |
| Social context*** | 66.7 (66.7) | 100.0 (33.3) |
| Symptoms*** | 75.0 (50.0) | 100.0 (0.0) |
| Management*** | 61.5 (15.4) | 84.6 (15.4) |
| Evaluation*** | 0.0 (50.0) | 100.0 (50.0) |
| Documentation*** | 100.0 (25.0) | 100.0 (25.0) |
| Treatment*** | 50.0 (50.0) | 100.0 (50.0) |
| Follow-up*** | 60.0 (40.0) | 80.0 (40.0) |
*p ≤ 0.05; **p ≤ 0.01; ***p ≤ 0.001.
Sample questions from pre- and posttests.
| Domain or sub-domain | Sample question |
|---|---|
| Epidemiology | Which of the following describes the overall trend of cancer in Botswana? The number of new cases of Kaposi sarcoma is increasing, while the number of new cancers of all other cancers is generally decreasing The number of new cases of Kaposi sarcoma is staying the same, while the number of new cancers of all other cancers is generally increasing We don’t know anything about the number of new cases of cancer in Botswana |
| Pathophysiology | Which of the following best describes how cancer develops? A normal cell grows into a mass A normal cell travels through the blood stream to other parts of the body A cell spreads from one person to another person through touching |
| Sociocultural context | You are seeing a patient in clinic who has been diagnosed with colon cancer. He tells you that he has not followed up at Marina over the past few months because he has been seeing a traditional healer and believes that he will be cured this way. While there is no single right answer, the following is one helpful approach in counseling this patient: Mention to the patient that you do not know anything about cancer and its treatment, as you are not a cancer specialist Respectfully avoid discussing spiritual and traditional beliefs, as these are very personal and can never be aligned with western medical treatment State that traditional medicines are perfectly safe and do not interfere with medical therapies such as chemotherapy |
| Symptoms | Which of the following is a symptom that might be seen in cancer? Weight gain despite regular exercise Increased energy Increased appetite |
| Evaluation | Pap smear Lumbar puncture No further evaluation at clinic is necessary, refer patient immediately to SLH |
| Counseling/documentation | You have just seen a 45-year-old male patient at Lekgwapheng clinic, who is showing some signs suspicious for cancer. He walked to clinic today accompanied by his wife. You would like to refer him to Scottish Livingstone Hospital (SLH) for further evaluation. What documentation should you fill out at the end of the visit today? OPD card, referral form, and biopsy requisition form Clinic cancer register and referral form OPD card, clinic cancer register, and biopsy requisition form |
| Treatment | A 33-year-old HIV-positive male who has recently been diagnosed with lymphoma comes to see you at Lephepe clinic. His HIV has been well controlled for several years. He has been receiving chemotherapy at Marina, with the most recent treatment cycle 1 week ago. He is complaining of fever, cough, and fatigue for 3 days. His vital signs are: temperature 39.3°C, blood pressure 90/60, pulse 128 beats per minute, respirations 25/min, saturating 100% on room air. What are the next most important steps in managing this patient? Give oral antibiotics, order chest X-ray, and ensure follow up to clinic in 2 weeks Give IV antibiotics, and refer same day to the nearest IDCC Give IV antibiotics and ORS, schedule follow-up appoint to clinic in 1 week and counsel the patient on symptoms to come back immediately to clinic for |
| Follow-up | You have just seen a 45-year-old male patient at Lekgwapheng clinic, who is showing some signs suspicious for cancer. He walked to clinic today accompanied by his wife. You would like to refer him to Scottish Livingstone Hospital (SLH) for further evaluation. Ask the patient to call you after the SLH visit Call the patient every week to find out if he was seen at SLH Call the SLH OPD every month to find out if the patient was seen |
Correct answers in bold.
| The training placed an emphasis on concrete and practical steps health-care providers can take to Interview patients and evaluate them on physical exam, Care for patients with suggestive signs and symptoms of cancer at primary care level, including through counseling, pain management, and other supportive measures, triage and stabilization, and Refer appropriately with proper documentation, communication, and transportation arrangements as needed. |
| By the end of the training participants should be able to: Describe burden of major cancers in the world and in Botswana, key risk factors, and the types of cancer services available in Botswana. Identify patients who may have cancer, based on assessing for suggestive symptoms in detailed history taking and assessing for suggestive signs on physical exam. Differentiate between triage statuses of patients suspected to have cancer, based on considerations such as performance status, already incurred health system delays, presence of general medical or suspected oncologic emergency. Use triage status to determine where, when and how to refer patients appropriately. Provide appropriate initial medical management at primary care clinic, including stabilization of emergent patient and evaluation using services available at primary care level Discuss with patients the possibility of cancer as a cause of symptoms and the general process of evaluation and follow up Explain and provide education and support relevant to common cancer myths and stigma issues, with sensitivity toward individual, religious, and cultural beliefs List relevant services and clinics available at Scottish Livingstone Hospital (district) and Princess Marina Hospital (tertiary) available for diagnostic evaluation of cancer (NB. key contact information and clinic scheduling were also provided at the training) |
| Session title | Format | Session details |
|---|---|---|
| Cancer in Botswana | Didactic slide presentation | Overview of the epidemiology of cancer in Botswana, including most common types, prevalent risk factors, and trends in incidence cases over time. Services for screening, diagnosis, and treatment of cancer available in Botswana’s public sector were reviewed including facility names and key contacts |
| Cancer myths and stigma | Interactive session including role plays | Discussion of common myths and stigma related to cancer and approaches on how to provide education and counseling in culturally sensitive and supportive manner |
| Basic principles of cancer | Didactic slide presentation | Basic principles of cancer pathophysiology, available strategies for primary and secondary prevention, the role of pathology-based diagnosis and cancer staging, and major categories of cancer treatment |
| Signs and symptoms of cancer | Didactic slide presentation with clinical images and clinical vignettes | Symptoms and signs that can be associated with cancer, how to pick up constellations of them, and differential diagnosis to consider |
| Overview of major cancers | Didactic slide presentation with clinical images | For the most common cancers, review of clinical presentation, diagnosis and staging necessary, treatment options, and unique considerations such as post-mastectomy arm edema in breast cancer |
| Cancer-related emergencies | Didactic slide presentation with clinical images and clinical vignettes | Key signs and symptoms that may be seen in medical emergencies that can occur in cancer patients such as neutropenic fever and airway obstruction. How to recognize these as well as initial acute management and emergent transfer |
| Palliative care for cancer patients | Didactic slide presentation, with clinical vignettes | Defining what palliative care is, what it is beyond pain management, and its role across the spectrum of illness and beyond death. The role of primary-care providers in delivering palliative care |
| Encountering patients | Didactic slide presentation with clinical vignettes | Presentation of criteria to consider in triaging patient as stable, urgent, or emergent. For stable patients determining where to refer them and time interval of follow-up, by navigating referral algorithm |
| Case studies practice | Group work clinical vignettes, practice, and role plays | Opportunity to synthesize concepts across all previous sessions, where participants practice approaches of how to assess, manage, and refer patients in front of them, and what to say to patients. Clinical vignettes include patient presenting to clinic with sepsis, another with symptoms and signs common to TB and lymphoma, and patient |