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What are the perceived unmet needs for patient care, education, and research among genitourinary cancer nurses in Australia? A mixed method study.

Paterson, Catherine; Anderson, Helen; Rosano, Michelle; Cowan, Donna; Schulz, Diana; Santoro, Kerry; Forshaw, Tina; Hawks, Cynthia; Roberts, Natasha; Cancer Nurses Society of Australia

Authors

Catherine Paterson

Helen Anderson

Michelle Rosano

Donna Cowan

Diana Schulz

Kerry Santoro

Tina Forshaw

Cynthia Hawks

Natasha Roberts

Cancer Nurses Society of Australia



Abstract

Specialist genitourinary (GU) nurses provide care to a broad and diverse group of patients diagnosed with kidney, bladder, prostate, testicular, adrenal, and penile cancer. The purpose of this study was to identify GU cancer nurse perspectives of perceived unmet needs in service provision, specific educational and research priorities. A concurrent mixed methods study design incorporated quantitative and qualitative data collection from the GU Cancer nurses workforce in Australia. Quantitative data collected using an electronic survey instrument and were analysed using descriptive statistics. Qualitative data collected through semi-structed interviews and coded for thematic analysis. Ethical approval was gained. 50 responses were received from the electronic survey. 39/50 (78%) were female and 35 (70%) were metropolitan based. The highest domains of perceived unmet needs related to psychological/emotional needs - 17/23 (73.91%), intimacy needs – 15/23 (65.22%) and informational needs – 13/23 (56.52%). The themes from the qualitative interviews identified: 1. Patient needs – lack of tumour specific contact for cancer patients, fragmented delivery of cancer care, perception of better access to supportive care for public patients, lack of access to supportive care screening tools for needs assessment. 2. Educational needs – lack of GU specific cancer educational resources/learning opportunities and barriers to accessing educational opportunities. 3. Research priorities - impact on carers/partners, specific needs of different GU cancers, future focus on genetic testing/counselling, interventions for financial toxicity and development of models of care for geriatric GU patients. Specialist GU cancer nurses support a broad group of patients. Given the prominence of addressing unmet cancer care needs among people with GU cancers in this study, cancer nursing as a discipline alongside the multidisciplinary team, requires innovative solutions to overcome fragmented care which is often highly complex, and develop individualised and integrated care across the cancer care continuum. We encourage clinicians, researchers, policy makers, people affected by cancer, and their care networks, to continue to drive innovation by 1) Embedding an integrated approach to cancer nursing, 2) Implementation of shared care, 3) Implementation of patient navigation, 4) Embracing emerging technologies, 5) Future focus on education, and 6) Future focus on nurse-led research.

Citation

PATERSON, C., ANDERSON, H., ROSANO, M., COWAN, D., SCHULZ, D., SANTORO, K., FORSHAW, T., HAWKS, C. and ROBERTS, N., on behalf of Cancer Nurses Society of Australia. 2024. What are the perceived unmet needs for patient care, education, and research among genitourinary cancer nurses in Australia? A mixed method study. Asia-Pacific journal of oncology nursing [online], In Press, article number 100564. Available from: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apjon.2024.100564

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Jul 22, 2024
Online Publication Date Jul 25, 2024
Deposit Date Jul 30, 2024
Publicly Available Date Jul 30, 2024
Journal Asia-Pacific journal of oncology nursing
Print ISSN 2347-5625
Publisher Medknow Publications
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Article Number 100564
DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apjon.2024.100564
Keywords Genitourinary (GU); Nursing; Cancer
Public URL https://rgu-repository.worktribe.com/output/2422958

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