| Literature DB >> 31791308 |
Neha Faruqui1,2, Rohina Joshi3,4,5, Alexandra Martiniuk3,4,6, Jennifer Lowe7, Ramandeep Arora7,8, Huma Anis7, Manas Kalra9, Sameer Bakhshi10, Ananya Mishra10, Ayyagari Santa11, Sudha Sinha12, Sirisharani Siddaiahgari13, Rachna Seth14, Sarah Bernays3,15.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cure rates for children with cancer in India lag behind that of high-income countries. Various disease, treatment and socio-economic related factors contribute to this gap including barriers in timely access of diagnostic and therapeutic care. This study investigated barriers to accessing care from symptom onset to beginning of treatment, from perspectives of caregivers of children with cancer in India.Entities:
Keywords: Accessing care; Childhood cancer; Diagnosis delay; India; Qualitative study; Referral pathways; Treatment delay
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31791308 PMCID: PMC6889559 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-019-7911-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Inclusion and exclusion criteria applied to the selection of participants
| Inclusion criteria: | |
| • Children diagnosed with cancers before the age of 18 years | |
| • Diagnosed children who commenced first line treatment (curative or palliative intent) at the participating treating hospital, no more than one month prior to date of recruitment | |
| • Children residing in India at the time of onset of symptoms and have not travelled outside India to seek care | |
| • Children who have a caregiver present at the time of the interview | |
| • Caregivers who can speak the local language or a language known to the interviewers (Hindi, English, Urdu, Telugu) | |
| Exclusion criteria: | |
| • Non-malignant haematological conditions like thalassemia, haemophilia | |
| • Those who have presented with relapse during/after treatment |
Themes and sub-themes derived from data analysis
| Themes | Sub-themes |
|---|---|
| 1. | 1.1 Efforts and avenues taken in the referral pathway |
| 1.2 Determinants influencing the referral pathway | |
| 1.3 Patient navigation at the treating hospital | |
| 2. | 2.1 Religious and cultural beliefs |
| 2.2 Family and social dynamics | |
| 2.3 Ability to stay while receiving treatment | |
| 2.4 Health care provider-patient support | |
| 3. | 3.1 Financial impacts |
| 3.2 Ongoing emotional and psychological impacts of the pathway |
Fig. 1Typical referral pathway for most families traveling from other cities. This journey is an example of a child diagnosed with ALL in Delhi, belonging to a village in the state of Jharkhand who then travelled to cities within the states of West Bengal and Bihar before arriving in Delhi. Note: some of these pathways consisted of repeated visits
Fig. 2Typical referral pathway for most families residing within the same city as the participating treating centre. This journey is an example of a child diagnosed with AML in Hyderabad and a child diagnosed with Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma in Delhi. Note: some of these pathways consisted of repeated visits