| Literature DB >> 35877263 |
Fidel Rubagumya1,2,3, Manju Sengar4, Sidy Ka5, Nazik Hammad3, Christopher M Booth2,3, Safiya Karim6.
Abstract
Globally, there is increasing emphasis on value-based cancer care. Rising healthcare costs and reduced health care spending and budgets, especially in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), call for patients, providers, and healthcare systems to apply the Choose Wisely (CW) approach. This approach seeks to advance a dialogue on avoiding unnecessary medical tests, treatments, and procedures. Several factors have been described as barriers and facilitators to the implementation of the Choosing Wisely recommendations in high-income countries but none for LMICs. In this review, we attempt to classify potential barriers to the Choose Wisely implementation relative to the sources of behavior and potential intervention functions that can be implemented in order to reduce these barriers.Entities:
Keywords: Africa; Choosing Wisely; low and middle-income countries; value-based cancer care
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35877263 PMCID: PMC9320636 DOI: 10.3390/curroncol29070403
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Oncol ISSN: 1198-0052 Impact factor: 3.109
COM-B Model and Barriers to Implementation of the CW Recommendations.
| Barriers | COM-B Category | Intervention Functions | Behavior Change Techniques |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| Lack of patient awareness of the CW recommendations | Physical Capability | Education | Translate CW recommendations in an easy to understand language and distribute in waiting areas |
| Lack of trust between patient and providers | Psychological Capability | Education | Carry out campaigns encouraging patients to talk with their provider |
| Limited acceptability | Psychological Capability | Education | Create culturally tailored learning modules for patients |
| Patients beliefs that more is better | Psychological Capability | Education | Educate patients on the problem of overuse |
|
| |||
| CW recommendations/list not easily accessible | Physical Capability | Enablement | Distribute CW list hard copies to every unit and clinic room and soft copies to every provider |
| Providers not knowledgeable of CW list | Psychological Capability | Education | Teach CW content, including evidence basis for these recommendations to providers in dedicated education session and integrate into existing curriculum for residents and nurses. |
| Providers do not believe that they should be following CW recommendations | Psychological Capability | Education | Publicity campaign to raise awareness of the CW initiative. |
| Belief that expertise-based decisions are better than CW recommendations | Reflective Motivation | Training | Train providers in the benefits of CW-based practice and persuade them that they should be used in favor of expert opinion. |
| Fear of Litigation | Psychology Capability | Education | Carry out workshops and show that the CW list is based on evidence; hence, providers should not fear litigation. |
|
| |||
| Lack of leadership support | Physical Opportunity | Environmental Restructuring | Engage hospital leadership and show them the benefit of value-based cancer care |
| Revenue generation –Reluctance to implement CW recommendations as this may lead to reduced revenues | Physical Opportunity | Environmental Restructuring | Engage hospital leadership and show detrimental effects of overuse for both patients and the hospitals. |
| Lack of accountability in patient management | Physical Opportunity | Education | Encourage hospitals to carry out audits and provide formal feedback |
|
| |||
| Cultural Norms | Psychological Capability | Education | Mass media campaigns |
| Regulations | Social Opportunity | Training | Health regulator product warnings |
| Health Policy | Physical Opportunity | Education | Introduction of value-based reimbursement policies amongst insurance providers. |
From Ref. [22], used under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (Accessed on 15 July 2022).