Future Fertility Among Pediatric Cancer Patients: Experiences and Perspectives of Health Workers in a Low-Resource Setting.

IF 1.2 4区 医学 Q4 ONCOLOGY Journal of adolescent and young adult oncology Pub Date : 2024-04-13 DOI:10.1089/jayao.2024.0011
Anthony Kayiira, Sarah McLaughlin, Jennifer Neda John, D. Zaake, Serena Xiong, J. Balagadde, Veronica Gomez-Lobo, Henry Wabinga, R. Ghebre
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Abstract

Purpose:Although fertility preservation for patients with childhood and adolescent cancer is considered standard of care in the high-resource settings, it is rarely offered in low-resource settings. This study explores the experiences and perspectives of oncology health care professionals in Uganda to identify contextual barriers and facilitators to addressing oncofertility in low-resource settings. Methods: Using ground theory, we conducted in-depth face-to-face interviews of health care professionals managing pediatric patients at the Uganda Cancer Institute (UCI). Using a systematic, semi-structured interview guide, participants were asked open-ended questions about their understanding of fertility preservation and their perspectives on implementing this care at their institution. Although all the eligible health care providers were interviewed, interview transcripts were uploaded into NVivo version 12 and openly coded as per theoretical requirements. Codes were refined into categories and later into structured themes. Results: Twelve health care professionals were interviewed. Most participants identified as female (n = 9). Their role in the medical team varied from nurses (n = 6), medical officers (n = 3), pediatric oncologists (n = 2), and pediatric oncology fellow (n = 1). Six themes were noted as follows: (1) importance of information, (2) importance of future fertility, (3) inadequate consideration to future fertility, (4) communication barriers, (5) inadequate knowledge, and (6) resource barriers. Conclusion: Although health care providers at the UCI face contextual barriers to addressing future fertility among patients with pediatric cancer, they value preserving fertility in this population. Future initiatives that aim to introduce oncofertility care in low-resource settings should prioritize educating providers and building capacity to meet the oncofertility needs in this setting.
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小儿癌症患者的未来生育力:低资源环境中卫生工作者的经验和观点。
目的:虽然为儿童和青少年癌症患者保留生育力在高资源环境中被视为标准护理,但在低资源环境中却很少提供。本研究探讨了乌干达肿瘤医护人员的经验和观点,以确定在低资源环境中解决非生殖性疾病的背景障碍和促进因素。研究方法:利用基础理论,我们对乌干达癌症研究所(UCI)管理儿科患者的医护人员进行了面对面的深入访谈。我们使用系统的半结构化访谈指南,向参与者提出了开放式问题,内容涉及他们对生育力保存的理解以及他们对在本机构实施这种护理的看法。尽管所有符合条件的医疗服务提供者都接受了访谈,但访谈记录被上传到 NVivo 第 12 版,并根据理论要求进行了公开编码。编码被细化为不同类别,随后又被细化为结构化主题。结果12 名医护人员接受了访谈。大多数参与者为女性(n = 9)。她们在医疗团队中的角色各不相同,包括护士(6 人)、医务人员(3 人)、儿科肿瘤专家(2 人)和儿科肿瘤研究员(1 人)。以下是六个主题:(1)信息的重要性;(2)未来生育能力的重要性;(3)对未来生育能力考虑不足;(4)沟通障碍;(5)知识不足;(6)资源障碍。结论:尽管加州大学洛杉矶分校的医疗服务提供者在解决儿童癌症患者的未来生育问题时面临环境障碍,但他们非常重视保护这一人群的生育力。未来旨在低资源环境中引入辅助生育护理的计划应优先考虑对医疗服务提供者进行教育和能力建设,以满足这种环境下的辅助生育需求。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.70
自引率
15.00%
发文量
114
期刊介绍: Journal of Adolescent and Young Adult Oncology (JAYAO) breaks new ground as the first cancer journal dedicated to all aspects of adolescent and young adult (AYA)-aged cancer patients and survivors. JAYAO is the only central forum for peer-reviewed articles, reviews, and research in the field, bringing together all AYA oncology stakeholders and professionals across disciplines, including clinicians, researchers, psychosocial and supportive care providers, and pediatric and adult cancer institutions.
期刊最新文献
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