| Literature DB >> 33889211 |
Dorothy Lombe1,2, Richard Sullivan3, Carlo Caduff4, Zipporah Ali5, Nirmala Bhoo-Pathy6, Jim Cleary7, Matt Jalink8, Tomohiro Matsuda9, Deborah Mukherji10, Diana Sarfati11, Verna Vanderpuye12, Aasim Yusuf13, Christopher Booth8.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Public health emergencies and crises such as the current COVID-19 pandemic can accelerate innovation and place renewed focus on the value of health interventions. Capturing important lessons learnt, both positive and negative, is vital. We aimed to document the perceived positive changes (silver linings) in cancer care that emerged during the COVID-19 pandemic and identify challenges that may limit their long-term adoption.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; barriers; cancer care; policy change; silver linings
Year: 2021 PMID: 33889211 PMCID: PMC8043681 DOI: 10.3332/ecancer.2021.1202
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ecancermedicalscience ISSN: 1754-6605
Characteristics of the interviewed cohort.
| Speciality | Gender | Country | WHO region | World Bank group by income |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Medical oncologist | Male | Canada | PAHO | High income |
| Medical oncologist | Female | Lebanon | EMRO | Upper middle income |
| Chief medical officer | Male | Pakistan | EMRO | Lower middle income |
| Public health medicine specialist | Female | Malaysia | WPRO | Upper middle income |
| Gynaecologic oncologist | Male | Zambia | AFRO | Lower middle income |
| Palliative care physician | Female | Kenya | AFRO | Lower middle income |
| Epidemiologist | Female | UK | EURO | High income |
| Clinical oncologist | Male | UK | EURO | High income |
| Director of cancer centre | Male | Columbia | PAHO | Upper middle income |
| Paediatric oncologist | Male | Turkey | EURO | Upper middle income |
| Epidemiologist | Female | Australia | WPRO | High income |
| Director of cancer centre | Male | India | SEARO | Lower middle income |
| Epidemiologist/statistician | Male | Japan | WPRO | High income |
| Clinical oncologist | Female | Ghana | AFRO | Lower middle income |
| National director, cancer control | Female | New Zealand | WPRO | High income |
| Director of cancer institute | Male | UK | EURO | High income |
| Haematologist | Male | Malaysia | WPRO | Upper middle income |
| Clinical oncologist | Female | Zambia | AFRO | Lower middle income |
| CEO palliative care | Male | Malaysia | WPRO | Upper middle income |
| Medical physicist | Female | Zambia | AFRO | Lower middle income |
PAHO, Pan American Health Organisation; EMRO, Regional Office for the Eastern Mediterranean; WPRO, Regional Office for the Western Pacific; AFRO, Regional Office for Africa; EURO, Regional Office for Europe; SEARO, Regional Office for South-East Asia
Silver linings themes and examples.
| Themes of silver linings | Examples of silver linings | |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Value in cancer care | Treatments that have the greatest magnitude of benefit |
| Honest conversations – psychological aspects of palliative care | ||
| 2 | Digital communication (telephone/web-based) | Less travel for unnecessary visits and decongested clinics |
| For collaborative effort amongst clinical researchers and multidisciplinary teams and access to meetings | ||
| 3 | Convenience | International collaboration easy – no need for visas, expensive travel costs |
| For individuals with families who could not participate because it meant time away from home | ||
| 4 | Inclusivity and cooperation | NGOs and palliative care have gained prominence for role in community acting as a bridge between community and tertiary centres |
| Team work across professional cadres (e.g. epidemiologists being valued in clinical scenario) | ||
| 5 | Decentralisation of cancer care | Shift to general practitioner/nurse led follow-up visits and imaging |
| Community engagement in palliative care (which is the best model that has taken time to take root) | ||
| Innovation in medicine distribution, home administration of chemotherapy | ||
| 6 | Policy change | Basis for change in legal framework prohibiting community based chemotherapy administration and use of digital technology in health |
| Shift to more patient centred screening practices HPV – self-collection; stool-based testing for colon cancer | ||
| 7 | Human interactions | Easier consolidation of global collaborations and meeting of unlikely groups |
| Collegial interactions are qualitative than quantitative because of limited time with increased communication efficiency | ||
| 8 | Hygiene practices | More hand washing, adherence to cleaning schedules |
| 9 | Health awareness and promotion | Increased awareness of anti-smoking messaging |
| Increased exposure of fake news and false medical propaganda; increased trust in health experts | ||
| 10 | Systems improvement | Increased attention to waiting times/appointments |
| Increased attention to patient throughput at different levels of service in hospitals |
Shadows to silver linings.
| Themes of silver linings | Examples of ‘shadows’ to the silver linings | |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Value in cancer care | Bigger fraction of radiotherapy require machines with high precision |
| Legal framework | ||
| 2 | Digital communication (telephone/web-based) | Disparities in access – not all professionals and students have access to smart phone, reliable internet or the skills |
| Misses some emotions and expressions that could change the care pattern | ||
| Being connected 24 hours to meetings in different time zones takes away family time and there is usually no time off work allocated to virtual meetings | ||
| Legal frame work | ||
| 3 | Convenience | Home environment not convenient for some |
| 4 | Inclusivity and cooperation | Unintended exposures to risks |
| 5 | Decentralisation of cancer care | Lack of human resource and infrastructure |
| 6 | Policy change | Established systems are harder to change as a small change in one place may have an unintended domino/collateral effect |
| 7 | Human interactions | Burn-out from increased expectation or responsibilities |
| 8 | Hygiene practices | Effects of overuse of sanitisers, increased exposure to chemicals in cleaning materials unknown |
| 9 | Health awareness and promotion | Some contradiction on initial data and expert opinions |
| 10 | Systems improvement | Costs of infrastructure and human resource |
Barriers to silver linings.
| Themes | Barriers to continuation after pandemic | |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Value in cancer care | Economic behaviour – Reimbursement for longer fractionation |
| 2 | Digital communication (telephone/web-based) | Behavioural preference from both patient and physicians for physical contact |
| Students may feel not value for money through web based teaching | ||
| 3 | Convenience | Loss of team spirit as people lose physical workspace due to social distancing rules |
| 4 | Inclusivity and cooperation | Cultural barriers |
| 5 | Decentralisation of cancer care | Belief that best treatment is at tertiary level |
| 6 | Policy change | Policy makers may not be able to understand what happens on the ground due to lack of eloquent justification from technocrats |
| 7 | Human interactions | Eventually, the pandemic will be over and online meetings will revert to physical meetings with associated costs |
| 8 | Hygiene practices | Behavioural attitudes and relaxation |
| 9 | Health awareness and promotion | Lack of will power to break unhealthy habits; Distrust in mass information |
| 10 | Systems improvement | Behavioural attitudes |