Potential determinants of health-care professionals’ use of survivorship care plans: a qualitative study using the theoretical domains framework
Background Survivorship care plans are intended to improve coordination of care for the nearly 14 million cancer survivors in the United States. Evidence suggests that survivorship care plans (SCPs) have positive outcomes for survivors, health-care professionals, and cancer programs, and several hig...
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| Vydané v: | Implementation science : IS Ročník 9; číslo 1; s. 167 |
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| Hlavní autori: | , , , , |
| Médium: | Journal Article |
| Jazyk: | English |
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London
BioMed Central
15.11.2014
BioMed Central Ltd Springer Nature B.V |
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| ISSN: | 1748-5908, 1748-5908 |
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| Abstract | Background
Survivorship care plans are intended to improve coordination of care for the nearly 14 million cancer survivors in the United States. Evidence suggests that survivorship care plans (SCPs) have positive outcomes for survivors, health-care professionals, and cancer programs, and several high-profile organizations now recommend SCP use. Nevertheless, SCP use remains limited among health-care professionals in United States cancer programs. Knowledge of barriers to SCP use is limited in part because extant studies have used anecdotal evidence to identify determinants. This study uses the theoretical domains framework to identify relevant constructs that are potential determinants of SCP use among United States health-care professionals.
Methods
We conducted semi-structured interviews to assess the relevance of 12 theoretical domains in predicting SCP use among 13 health-care professionals in 7 cancer programs throughout the United States with diverse characteristics. Relevant theoretical domains were identified through thematic coding of interview transcripts, identification of specific beliefs within coded text units, and mapping of specific beliefs onto theoretical constructs.
Results
We found the following theoretical domains (based on specific beliefs) to be potential determinants of SCP use: health-care professionals’ beliefs about the consequences of SCP use (benefit to survivors, health-care professionals, and the system as a whole); motivation and goals regarding SCP use (advocating SCP use; extent to which using SCPs competed for health-care professionals’ time); environmental context and resources (whether SCPs were delivered at a dedicated visit and whether a system, information technology, and funding facilitated SCP use); and social influences (whether using SCPs is an organizational priority, influential people support SCP use, and people who could assist with SCP use buy into using SCPs). Specific beliefs mapped onto the following psychological constructs: outcome expectancies, intrinsic motivation, goal priority, resources, leadership, and team working.
Conclusions
Previous studies have explored a limited range of determinants of SCP use. Our findings suggest a more comprehensive list of potential determinants that could be leveraged to promote SCP use. These results are particularly timely as cancer programs face impending SCP use requirements. Future work should develop instruments to measure the potential determinants and assess their relative influence on SCP use. |
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| AbstractList | Doc number: 167 Abstract Background: Survivorship care plans are intended to improve coordination of care for the nearly 14 million cancer survivors in the United States. Evidence suggests that survivorship care plans (SCPs) have positive outcomes for survivors, health-care professionals, and cancer programs, and several high-profile organizations now recommend SCP use. Nevertheless, SCP use remains limited among health-care professionals in United States cancer programs. Knowledge of barriers to SCP use is limited in part because extant studies have used anecdotal evidence to identify determinants. This study uses the theoretical domains framework to identify relevant constructs that are potential determinants of SCP use among United States health-care professionals. Methods: We conducted semi-structured interviews to assess the relevance of 12 theoretical domains in predicting SCP use among 13 health-care professionals in 7 cancer programs throughout the United States with diverse characteristics. Relevant theoretical domains were identified through thematic coding of interview transcripts, identification of specific beliefs within coded text units, and mapping of specific beliefs onto theoretical constructs. Results: We found the following theoretical domains (based on specific beliefs) to be potential determinants of SCP use: health-care professionals' beliefs about the consequences of SCP use (benefit to survivors, health-care professionals, and the system as a whole); motivation and goals regarding SCP use (advocating SCP use; extent to which using SCPs competed for health-care professionals' time); environmental context and resources (whether SCPs were delivered at a dedicated visit and whether a system, information technology, and funding facilitated SCP use); and social influences (whether using SCPs is an organizational priority, influential people support SCP use, and people who could assist with SCP use buy into using SCPs). Specific beliefs mapped onto the following psychological constructs: outcome expectancies, intrinsic motivation, goal priority, resources, leadership, and team working. Conclusions: Previous studies have explored a limited range of determinants of SCP use. Our findings suggest a more comprehensive list of potential determinants that could be leveraged to promote SCP use. These results are particularly timely as cancer programs face impending SCP use requirements. Future work should develop instruments to measure the potential determinants and assess their relative influence on SCP use. Background Survivorship care plans are intended to improve coordination of care for the nearly 14 million cancer survivors in the United States. Evidence suggests that survivorship care plans (SCPs) have positive outcomes for survivors, health-care professionals, and cancer programs, and several high-profile organizations now recommend SCP use. Nevertheless, SCP use remains limited among health-care professionals in United States cancer programs. Knowledge of barriers to SCP use is limited in part because extant studies have used anecdotal evidence to identify determinants. This study uses the theoretical domains framework to identify relevant constructs that are potential determinants of SCP use among United States health-care professionals. Methods We conducted semi-structured interviews to assess the relevance of 12 theoretical domains in predicting SCP use among 13 health-care professionals in 7 cancer programs throughout the United States with diverse characteristics. Relevant theoretical domains were identified through thematic coding of interview transcripts, identification of specific beliefs within coded text units, and mapping of specific beliefs onto theoretical constructs. Results We found the following theoretical domains (based on specific beliefs) to be potential determinants of SCP use: health-care professionals’ beliefs about the consequences of SCP use (benefit to survivors, health-care professionals, and the system as a whole); motivation and goals regarding SCP use (advocating SCP use; extent to which using SCPs competed for health-care professionals’ time); environmental context and resources (whether SCPs were delivered at a dedicated visit and whether a system, information technology, and funding facilitated SCP use); and social influences (whether using SCPs is an organizational priority, influential people support SCP use, and people who could assist with SCP use buy into using SCPs). Specific beliefs mapped onto the following psychological constructs: outcome expectancies, intrinsic motivation, goal priority, resources, leadership, and team working. Conclusions Previous studies have explored a limited range of determinants of SCP use. Our findings suggest a more comprehensive list of potential determinants that could be leveraged to promote SCP use. These results are particularly timely as cancer programs face impending SCP use requirements. Future work should develop instruments to measure the potential determinants and assess their relative influence on SCP use. Survivorship care plans are intended to improve coordination of care for the nearly 14 million cancer survivors in the United States. Evidence suggests that survivorship care plans (SCPs) have positive outcomes for survivors, health-care professionals, and cancer programs, and several high-profile organizations now recommend SCP use. Nevertheless, SCP use remains limited among health-care professionals in United States cancer programs. Knowledge of barriers to SCP use is limited in part because extant studies have used anecdotal evidence to identify determinants. This study uses the theoretical domains framework to identify relevant constructs that are potential determinants of SCP use among United States health-care professionals. We conducted semi-structured interviews to assess the relevance of 12 theoretical domains in predicting SCP use among 13 health-care professionals in 7 cancer programs throughout the United States with diverse characteristics. Relevant theoretical domains were identified through thematic coding of interview transcripts, identification of specific beliefs within coded text units, and mapping of specific beliefs onto theoretical constructs. We found the following theoretical domains (based on specific beliefs) to be potential determinants of SCP use: health-care professionals' beliefs about the consequences of SCP use (benefit to survivors, health-care professionals, and the system as a whole); motivation and goals regarding SCP use (advocating SCP use; extent to which using SCPs competed for health-care professionals' time); environmental context and resources (whether SCPs were delivered at a dedicated visit and whether a system, information technology, and funding facilitated SCP use); and social influences (whether using SCPs is an organizational priority, influential people support SCP use, and people who could assist with SCP use buy into using SCPs). Specific beliefs mapped onto the following psychological constructs: outcome expectancies, intrinsic motivation, goal priority, resources, leadership, and team working. Previous studies have explored a limited range of determinants of SCP use. Our findings suggest a more comprehensive list of potential determinants that could be leveraged to promote SCP use. These results are particularly timely as cancer programs face impending SCP use requirements. Future work should develop instruments to measure the potential determinants and assess their relative influence on SCP use. Survivorship care plans are intended to improve coordination of care for the nearly 14 million cancer survivors in the United States. Evidence suggests that survivorship care plans (SCPs) have positive outcomes for survivors, health-care professionals, and cancer programs, and several high-profile organizations now recommend SCP use. Nevertheless, SCP use remains limited among health-care professionals in United States cancer programs. Knowledge of barriers to SCP use is limited in part because extant studies have used anecdotal evidence to identify determinants. This study uses the theoretical domains framework to identify relevant constructs that are potential determinants of SCP use among United States health-care professionals.BACKGROUNDSurvivorship care plans are intended to improve coordination of care for the nearly 14 million cancer survivors in the United States. Evidence suggests that survivorship care plans (SCPs) have positive outcomes for survivors, health-care professionals, and cancer programs, and several high-profile organizations now recommend SCP use. Nevertheless, SCP use remains limited among health-care professionals in United States cancer programs. Knowledge of barriers to SCP use is limited in part because extant studies have used anecdotal evidence to identify determinants. This study uses the theoretical domains framework to identify relevant constructs that are potential determinants of SCP use among United States health-care professionals.We conducted semi-structured interviews to assess the relevance of 12 theoretical domains in predicting SCP use among 13 health-care professionals in 7 cancer programs throughout the United States with diverse characteristics. Relevant theoretical domains were identified through thematic coding of interview transcripts, identification of specific beliefs within coded text units, and mapping of specific beliefs onto theoretical constructs.METHODSWe conducted semi-structured interviews to assess the relevance of 12 theoretical domains in predicting SCP use among 13 health-care professionals in 7 cancer programs throughout the United States with diverse characteristics. Relevant theoretical domains were identified through thematic coding of interview transcripts, identification of specific beliefs within coded text units, and mapping of specific beliefs onto theoretical constructs.We found the following theoretical domains (based on specific beliefs) to be potential determinants of SCP use: health-care professionals' beliefs about the consequences of SCP use (benefit to survivors, health-care professionals, and the system as a whole); motivation and goals regarding SCP use (advocating SCP use; extent to which using SCPs competed for health-care professionals' time); environmental context and resources (whether SCPs were delivered at a dedicated visit and whether a system, information technology, and funding facilitated SCP use); and social influences (whether using SCPs is an organizational priority, influential people support SCP use, and people who could assist with SCP use buy into using SCPs). Specific beliefs mapped onto the following psychological constructs: outcome expectancies, intrinsic motivation, goal priority, resources, leadership, and team working.RESULTSWe found the following theoretical domains (based on specific beliefs) to be potential determinants of SCP use: health-care professionals' beliefs about the consequences of SCP use (benefit to survivors, health-care professionals, and the system as a whole); motivation and goals regarding SCP use (advocating SCP use; extent to which using SCPs competed for health-care professionals' time); environmental context and resources (whether SCPs were delivered at a dedicated visit and whether a system, information technology, and funding facilitated SCP use); and social influences (whether using SCPs is an organizational priority, influential people support SCP use, and people who could assist with SCP use buy into using SCPs). Specific beliefs mapped onto the following psychological constructs: outcome expectancies, intrinsic motivation, goal priority, resources, leadership, and team working.Previous studies have explored a limited range of determinants of SCP use. Our findings suggest a more comprehensive list of potential determinants that could be leveraged to promote SCP use. These results are particularly timely as cancer programs face impending SCP use requirements. Future work should develop instruments to measure the potential determinants and assess their relative influence on SCP use.CONCLUSIONSPrevious studies have explored a limited range of determinants of SCP use. Our findings suggest a more comprehensive list of potential determinants that could be leveraged to promote SCP use. These results are particularly timely as cancer programs face impending SCP use requirements. Future work should develop instruments to measure the potential determinants and assess their relative influence on SCP use. Survivorship care plans are intended to improve coordination of care for the nearly 14 million cancer survivors in the United States. Evidence suggests that survivorship care plans (SCPs) have positive outcomes for survivors, health-care professionals, and cancer programs, and several high-profile organizations now recommend SCP use. Nevertheless, SCP use remains limited among health-care professionals in United States cancer programs. Knowledge of barriers to SCP use is limited in part because extant studies have used anecdotal evidence to identify determinants. This study uses the theoretical domains framework to identify relevant constructs that are potential determinants of SCP use among United States health-care professionals. We conducted semi-structured interviews to assess the relevance of 12 theoretical domains in predicting SCP use among 13 health-care professionals in 7 cancer programs throughout the United States with diverse characteristics. Relevant theoretical domains were identified through thematic coding of interview transcripts, identification of specific beliefs within coded text units, and mapping of specific beliefs onto theoretical constructs. We found the following theoretical domains (based on specific beliefs) to be potential determinants of SCP use: health-care professionals' beliefs about the consequences of SCP use (benefit to survivors, health-care professionals, and the system as a whole); motivation and goals regarding SCP use (advocating SCP use; extent to which using SCPs competed for health-care professionals' time); environmental context and resources (whether SCPs were delivered at a dedicated visit and whether a system, information technology, and funding facilitated SCP use); and social influences (whether using SCPs is an organizational priority, influential people support SCP use, and people who could assist with SCP use buy into using SCPs). Specific beliefs mapped onto the following psychological constructs: outcome expectancies, intrinsic motivation, goal priority, resources, leadership, and team working. Previous studies have explored a limited range of determinants of SCP use. Our findings suggest a more comprehensive list of potential determinants that could be leveraged to promote SCP use. These results are particularly timely as cancer programs face impending SCP use requirements. Future work should develop instruments to measure the potential determinants and assess their relative influence on SCP use. Background Survivorship care plans are intended to improve coordination of care for the nearly 14 million cancer survivors in the United States. Evidence suggests that survivorship care plans (SCPs) have positive outcomes for survivors, health-care professionals, and cancer programs, and several high-profile organizations now recommend SCP use. Nevertheless, SCP use remains limited among health-care professionals in United States cancer programs. Knowledge of barriers to SCP use is limited in part because extant studies have used anecdotal evidence to identify determinants. This study uses the theoretical domains framework to identify relevant constructs that are potential determinants of SCP use among United States health-care professionals. Methods We conducted semi-structured interviews to assess the relevance of 12 theoretical domains in predicting SCP use among 13 health-care professionals in 7 cancer programs throughout the United States with diverse characteristics. Relevant theoretical domains were identified through thematic coding of interview transcripts, identification of specific beliefs within coded text units, and mapping of specific beliefs onto theoretical constructs. Results We found the following theoretical domains (based on specific beliefs) to be potential determinants of SCP use: health-care professionals' beliefs about the consequences of SCP use (benefit to survivors, health-care professionals, and the system as a whole); motivation and goals regarding SCP use (advocating SCP use; extent to which using SCPs competed for health-care professionals' time); environmental context and resources (whether SCPs were delivered at a dedicated visit and whether a system, information technology, and funding facilitated SCP use); and social influences (whether using SCPs is an organizational priority, influential people support SCP use, and people who could assist with SCP use buy into using SCPs). Specific beliefs mapped onto the following psychological constructs: outcome expectancies, intrinsic motivation, goal priority, resources, leadership, and team working. Conclusions Previous studies have explored a limited range of determinants of SCP use. Our findings suggest a more comprehensive list of potential determinants that could be leveraged to promote SCP use. These results are particularly timely as cancer programs face impending SCP use requirements. Future work should develop instruments to measure the potential determinants and assess their relative influence on SCP use. Keywords: Cancer, Health-care professional, Survivorship care plan, Implementation, Theoretical domains framework |
| ArticleNumber | 167 |
| Audience | Academic |
| Author | Presseau, Justin Birken, Sarah A Ellis, Shellie D Mayer, Deborah K Gerstel, Adrian A |
| Author_xml | – sequence: 1 givenname: Sarah A surname: Birken fullname: Birken, Sarah A email: birken@unc.edu organization: Department of Health Policy and Management, Gillings School of Global Public Health, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill – sequence: 2 givenname: Justin surname: Presseau fullname: Presseau, Justin organization: Institute of Health and Society, Newcastle University – sequence: 3 givenname: Shellie D surname: Ellis fullname: Ellis, Shellie D organization: Department of Health Policy and Management, University of Kansas School of Medicine – sequence: 4 givenname: Adrian A surname: Gerstel fullname: Gerstel, Adrian A organization: School of Nursing, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill – sequence: 5 givenname: Deborah K surname: Mayer fullname: Mayer, Deborah K organization: School of Nursing, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill |
| BackLink | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25398477$$D View this record in MEDLINE/PubMed |
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| Copyright | Birken et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. 2014 COPYRIGHT 2014 BioMed Central Ltd. 2014 Birken et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly credited. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated. |
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| Keywords | Survivorship care plan Theoretical domains framework Health-care professional Implementation Cancer |
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| References_xml | – volume: 52 start-page: 1 year: 2001 ident: 167_CR20 publication-title: Ann Rev Psychol doi: 10.1146/annurev.psych.52.1.1 – volume: 105 start-page: 1579 year: 2013 ident: 167_CR29 publication-title: J Natl Cancer Inst doi: 10.1093/jnci/djt258 – volume: 119 start-page: 164 issue: 1 year: 2013 ident: 167_CR3 publication-title: Cancer doi: 10.1002/cncr.27856 – volume: 6 start-page: 20 issue: 1 year: 2012 ident: 167_CR7 publication-title: J Cancer Surviv doi: 10.1007/s11764-011-0189-3 – volume: 30 start-page: 198 issue: 2 year: 2012 ident: 167_CR6 publication-title: J Psychosoc Oncol doi: 10.1080/07347332.2011.651260 – ident: 167_CR18 – volume: 7 start-page: 77 year: 2012 ident: 167_CR24 publication-title: Implementation Sci doi: 10.1186/1748-5908-7-77 – volume: 62 start-page: 220 year: 2012 ident: 167_CR1 publication-title: CA Cancer J Clin doi: 10.3322/caac.21149 – volume: 12 start-page: 20142 year: 2012 ident: 167_CR14 publication-title: CA Cancer J Clin – volume: 7 start-page: 1748 year: 2012 ident: 167_CR26 publication-title: Implement Sci doi: 10.1186/1748-5908-7-37 – volume: 50 start-page: 179 year: 1991 ident: 167_CR19 publication-title: Organ Behav Hum Decis Process doi: 10.1016/0749-5978(91)90020-T – volume: 7 start-page: 86 year: 2012 ident: 167_CR23 publication-title: Implementation Sci doi: 10.1186/1748-5908-7-86 – volume: 29 start-page: 720 issue: 4 year: 2014 ident: 167_CR11 publication-title: J Canc Educ doi: 10.1007/s13187-014-0645-7 – ident: 167_CR15 – volume: 7 start-page: 7 year: 2012 ident: 167_CR30 publication-title: Implemention Sci doi: 10.1186/1748-5908-7-7 – volume: 29 start-page: 689 issue: 4 year: 2014 ident: 167_CR12 publication-title: J Cancer Educ doi: 10.1007/s13187-014-0628-8 – volume: 14 start-page: 625 year: 2009 ident: 167_CR27 publication-title: Br J Health Psychol doi: 10.1348/135910708X397025 – volume: 17 start-page: 35 issue: 1 year: 2010 ident: 167_CR8 publication-title: Cancer Control doi: 10.1177/107327481001700105 – volume: 7 start-page: 211 issue: 2 year: 2013 ident: 167_CR5 publication-title: J Cancer Surviv doi: 10.1007/s11764-012-0261-7 – volume: 28 start-page: 290 year: 2013 ident: 167_CR16 publication-title: J Cancer Educ doi: 10.1007/s13187-013-0469-x – volume: 7 start-page: 32 issue: 1 year: 2013 ident: 167_CR10 publication-title: J Cancer Surviv doi: 10.1007/s11764-012-0242-x – volume: 14 start-page: 26 year: 2005 ident: 167_CR21 publication-title: Qual Saf Health Care doi: 10.1136/qshc.2004.011155 – volume: 6 start-page: 42 year: 2011 ident: 167_CR25 publication-title: Implement Sci doi: 10.1186/1748-5908-6-42 – volume: 25 start-page: 1299 year: 2010 ident: 167_CR28 publication-title: Psychol Health doi: 10.1080/08870440903194015 – volume: 30 start-page: suppl; abstr 91 issue: 15 year: 2012 ident: 167_CR2 publication-title: J Clin Oncol – volume: 20 start-page: 1579 year: 2012 ident: 167_CR13 publication-title: Support Care Cancer doi: 10.1007/s00520-012-1458-z – volume: 7 start-page: 93 year: 2012 ident: 167_CR22 publication-title: Implementation Sci doi: 10.1186/1748-5908-7-93 – volume: 25 start-page: 2270 year: 2007 ident: 167_CR17 publication-title: J Clin Oncol doi: 10.1200/JCO.2006.10.0826 – volume: 84 start-page: S211 issue: 3 year: 2012 ident: 167_CR9 publication-title: Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys doi: 10.1016/j.ijrobp.2012.07.549 – volume: 5 start-page: 23 issue: 1 year: 2013 ident: 167_CR4 publication-title: Open Breast Cancer J doi: 10.2174/1876817201305010023 |
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Survivorship care plans are intended to improve coordination of care for the nearly 14 million cancer survivors in the United States. Evidence... Survivorship care plans are intended to improve coordination of care for the nearly 14 million cancer survivors in the United States. Evidence suggests that... Background Survivorship care plans are intended to improve coordination of care for the nearly 14 million cancer survivors in the United States. Evidence... Doc number: 167 Abstract Background: Survivorship care plans are intended to improve coordination of care for the nearly 14 million cancer survivors in the... |
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| SubjectTerms | Attitude of Health Personnel Cancer Care Facilities - organization & administration Clinical Competence - standards Goals Health Administration Health aspects Health care reform Health Informatics Health Personnel Health Plan Implementation - organization & administration Health Policy Health Promotion and Disease Prevention Health Services Research Humans Interprofessional Relations Leadership Medical personnel Medicine Medicine & Public Health Motivation Neoplasms - therapy Patient Care Planning - statistics & numerical data Patient Care Team - organization & administration Physical instruments Public Health Qualitative research Quality Improvement Survivors United States |
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| Title | Potential determinants of health-care professionals’ use of survivorship care plans: a qualitative study using the theoretical domains framework |
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