An inventory of psychosocial oncological interventions in The Netherlands: identifying availability, gaps, and overlap in care provision.
Evelien R SpeltenChantal R M LammensVivian EngelenSaskia F A DuijtsPublished in: Journal of psychosocial oncology (2019)
Purpose: While a wide range of psychosocial oncological (PO) interventions has been developed, a systematic overview of interventions to inform patients, care providers, as well as researchers, policy makers and health insurers, is lacking. The aims of this paper were (1) to describe the attainment of this overview, which may be used in other jurisdictions and for other health conditions and (2) to reflect on what determines developments in this field.Methods: Dutch researchers and care providers were invited to describe PO-interventions they apply in research or clinical practice. Selection criteria for what constituted a PO-intervention were determined. The input was organized in 12 predefined categories (e.g. physical functioning, genetics).Findings: Sixty-six PO-interventions were included in the overview. Two major categories were psychosocial functioning (24%) and physical functioning and recovery (24%). Interventions are mostly directed at adults (65%) and not aimed at a specific type of cancer (61%). Nearly 25% of the interventions lacked scientific underpinning.Conclusions: This paper provides an overview of Dutch PO-interventions and input on what drives their development. The categorizing method can be used in other jurisdictions and for other health care conditions. A next step would be to investigate the effectiveness and evidence of PO-interventions.Implications for Psychosocial Providers and Policy: The open access overview of interventions provides referral information for care providers. By identifying possible gaps and overlap, the overview looks at possible drivers behind developments in this field which will be of interest to policy makers.
Keyphrases
- healthcare
- physical activity
- mental health
- public health
- palliative care
- randomized controlled trial
- systematic review
- prostate cancer
- quality improvement
- health information
- ejection fraction
- affordable care act
- radical prostatectomy
- social media
- climate change
- chronic kidney disease
- chronic pain
- peritoneal dialysis
- human health