| Literature DB >> 35113976 |
Melissa Horlait1, Melissa De Regge2,3, Saskia Baes1, Kristof Eeckloo3,4, Mark Leys1.
Abstract
The growing complexity of cancer care necessitates collaboration among different professionals. This interprofessional collaboration improves cancer care delivery and outcomes. Treatment decision-making within the context of a multidisciplinaire team meeting (MDTMs) may be seen as a particular form of interprofessional collaboration. Various studies on cancer MDTMs highlight a pattern of suboptimal information sharing between attendants. To overcome the lack of non-medical, patient-based information, it might be recommended that non-physician care professionals play a key patient advocacy role within cancer MDTMs. This study aims to explore non-physician care professionals' current and aspired role within cancer MDTMs. Additionally, the perceived hindering factors for these non-physician care professionals to fulfil their specific role are identified. The analysis focuses on nurses, specialist nurses, head nurses, psychologists, social workers, a head of social workers and data managers. The results show that non-physician care professionals play a limited role during case discussions in MDTMs. Neither do they actively participate in the decision-making process. Barriers perceived by non-physician care professionals are classified on two main levels: 1) team-related barriers (factors internally related to the team) and 2) external barriers (factors related to healthcare management and policy). A group of non-physician care professionals also belief that their information does not add value in the decision-making proces and as such, they underestimate their own role in MDTMs. To conclude, a change of culture is needed towards an interdisciplinary collaboration in which knowledge and expertise of different professions are equally assimilated into an integrated perspective to guarantee a true patient-centred approach for cancer MDTMs.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35113976 PMCID: PMC8812975 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0263611
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Different non-physician care professions included per type of data collection.
| Individual interviews | Duo interviews | Focus group 1 | Focus group 2 |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3 psychologists | 2 oncology nurses | 2 psychologists | 2 psychologists |
Overview of MOC attendance per profession by gender, years of experience and type of hospital.
| Gender | Experience | Hospital | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nurses | 17 female | 8 <15years | 15 non-academic |
| Psychologists | 7 female | 5 <15years | 6 non-academic |
| Social worker | 2 female | 3 <15years | 2 non-academic |
| Data managers | 2 female | 2 <15years | 2 academic |
Team-related barriers to non-physician cancer care professionals taking up an active role during MDTMs.
| Type | Subcategory | Mechanism | Professions affected |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Team composition | A large varied group of medical professionals in the meeting hinders active exchange of information. | Less experienced nurses and social workers |
| Spatial arrangements | Non-physician professionals are seated on the peripheries hindering participation in case discussions. | Social workers and a group of nurses | |
| Agreements regarding division of roles | Lack of (informal) agreements leads to an unclear role and ambiguous expectations among physicians. | Social workers and a group of nurses | |
| Time management | Time pressure hinders non-physician professionals to exchange patient-cantered information. | Psychologists, nurses and social workers | |
|
| Team climate | A medical focus prevails in MDTMs, which hinders active participation by non- physician professionals. This is strengthened by legal regulations but can be mediated by hospital culture. The attitude of the coordinator of the MDTM is a key factor. | The majority of psychologists, nurses and social workers |
|
| Professional beliefs | Non-physician professionals’ belief that treatment decisions are based on solely medical information, and that patient-related information has no added value in the decision-making process, hinders active case participation. | The majority of psychologists and nurses |
| Personal skills | Lack of self-confidence and assertiveness hinders active case participation. | Psychologists, nurses and social workers | |
| Work experience | Lack of experience in oncology as well as the lack of experience in the MDTM hinders active case participation. This can be mediated by personal skills. | Psychologists, nurses and social workers |
External barriers to non-physician cancer care professionals taking up an active role during MDTMS.
| Type | Subcategory | Mechanism | Professions affected |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Timing of the meeting in patients’ trajectory | Since MDTMs are organized at the beginning of a patient’s trajectory, a group of non-physician professionals lacks information on the patient, which hinders active case participation. | The entire group of psychologists, nurses and social workers working in smaller (non-academic) hospitals |
| Legal regulations | Legal regulations favour medical professions, which strengthens the medical focus in MDTMs. | Psychologists, nurses and social workers | |
| Standardization | Standardization of treatment and care leads, in a large number of cases, to standard medical decisions being made where no input of non-physician professionals is needed. | Psychologists, nurses and social workers | |
|
| Hospital culture | Lack of patient-centred approach of the hospital strengthens the medical focus in MDTMs, hindering active participation of non-physician staff | Nurses |