17 results on '"Charmaine Blanchard"'
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2. Multisector Collaborations and Global Oncology: The Only Way Forward
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Charmaine Blanchard, Buhle Lubuzo, Frederick Chite Asirwa, Xolisile Dlamini, Susan C. Msadabwe-Chikuni, Michael Mwachiro, Cyprien Shyirambere, Deo Ruhangaza, Dan A. Milner, Katherine Van Loon, Rebecca DeBoer, Phangisile Mtshali, Ute Dugan, Ellen Baker, and Lawrence N. Shulman
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Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
PURPOSEAt the 12th meeting of AORTIC (African Organization for Research and Training in Cancer) in Maputo, Mozambique, held between November 5 and November 8, 2019, a special workshop was organized to focus on the need for collaboration and coordination between governments and health systems in Africa with academic, industry, association, and other nongovernmental organizations to effect sustainable positive change for the care of patients with cancer.METHODSRepresentatives from seven different projects in Africa presented implementation science and demonstration projects of their to date efforts in cancer system improvement including patient access, South-South partnerships, in-country specialized training, palliative care consortium, treatment outcomes, and focused pathology and diagnostic capacity building. Key partners of the various projects served as moderators and commentators during the session.RESULTSFrom across all the presentations, lessons learned and exemplary evidence of the value of partnerships were gathered and summarized.CONCLUSIONThe concluding synthesis of the presentations determined that with the broad needs across cancer requiring in-depth expertise at each point on a patient’s journey, no single organization can effect change alone. Multipartner collaborations not only should be the norm but should also be coordinated so that efforts are not duplicated and maximum patient access to cancer diagnosis and care is achieved.
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- 2021
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3. A qualitative study to explore healthcare providers' perspectives on barriers and enablers to early detection of breast and cervical cancers among women attending primary healthcare clinics in Johannesburg, South Africa.
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Gugulethu Tshabalala, Charmaine Blanchard, Keletso Mmoledi, Desiree Malope, Daniel S O'Neil, Shane A Norris, Maureen Joffe, and Janan Janine Dietrich
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Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Low-and-middle income countries (LMICs) contribute approximately 70% of global cancer deaths, and the cancer incidence in these countries is rapidly increasing. Sub-Saharan African (SSA) countries, including South Africa (SA), bear some of the world's highest cancer case fatality rates, largely attributed to late diagnosis. We explored contextual enablers and barriers for early detection of breast and cervical cancers according to facility managers and clinical staff at primary healthcare clinics in the Soweto neighbourhood of Johannesburg, South Africa. We conducted qualitative in-depth interviews (IDIs) between August and November 2021 amongst 13 healthcare provider nurses and doctors as well as 9 facility managers at eight public healthcare clinics in Johannesburg. IDIs were audio-recorded, transcribed verbatim, and entered into NVIVO for framework data analysis. Analysis was stratified by healthcare provider role and identified apriori around the themes of barriers and facilitators for early detection and management of breast and cervical cancers. Findings were conceptualised within the socioecological model and then explored within the capability, opportunity and motivation model of behaviour (COM-B) for pathways that potentially influence the low screening provision and uptake. The findings revealed provider perceptions of insufficient South African Department of Health (SA DOH) training support and staff rotations resulting in providers lacking knowledge and skills on cancer, screening policies and techniques. This coupled with provider perceptions of poor patient cancer and screening knowledge revealed low capacity for cancer screening. Providers also perceived opportunity for cancer screening to be undermined by the limited screening services mandated by the SA DOH, insufficient providers, inadequate facilities, supplies and barriers to accessing laboratory results. Providers perceived women to prefer to self-medicate and consult with traditional healers and access primary care for curative services only. These findings compound the low opportunity to provide and demand cancer screening services. And because the National SA Health Department is perceived by providers not to prioritize cancer nor involve primary care stakeholders in policy and performance indicator development, overworked, unwelcoming providers have little motivation to learn screening skills and provide screening services. Providers reported that patients preferred to go elsewhere and that women perceived cervical cancer screening as painful. These perceptions must be confirmed for veracity among policy and patient stakeholders. Nevertheless, cost-effective interventions can be implemented to address these perceived barriers including multistakeholder education, mobile and tent screening facilities and using existing community fieldworkers and NGO partners in providing screening services. Our results revealed provider perspectives of complex barriers to the early detection and management of breast and cervical cancers in primary health clinic settings in Greater Soweto. These barriers together appear potentially to produce compounding effects, and therefore there is a need to research the cumulative impact but also engage with stakeholder groups to verify findings and create awareness. Additionally, opportunities do exist to intervene across the cancer care continuum in South Africa to address these barriers by improving the quality and volume of provider cancer screening services, and in turn, increasing the community demand and uptake for these services.
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- 2023
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4. Position paper on undergraduate Palliative Medicine education for doctors in South Africa
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Henriette Burger, Rene Krause, Charmaine Blanchard, Julia Ambler, Linda Ganca, Alan Barnard, Michelle Meiring, Mpho Ratshikana-Moloko, Hanneke Brits, Tracey Brand, Mitchell Scott, Langalibalele Mabuza, Martin Bac, Nozuko Zele-Mqonci, Parimalaranie Yogeswaran, and Liz Gwyther
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palliative medicine ,palliative care ,curriculum design ,education ,health professions education ,learning outcome ,competencies ,Medicine ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Background: Basic palliative care teaching should be included in training curricula for health care providers (HCPs) at all levels of the health service to ensure that the goal set by the South African (SA) National Policy Framework and Strategy for Palliative Care, to have an adequate number of appropriately trained HCPs in South Africa, is achieved. Furthermore, palliative learning objectives for nurses and doctors should be standardised. Many SA medical schools have integrated elements of Palliative Medicine (PM) teaching into undergraduate medical training programmes for doctors; however, the degree of integration varies widely, and consensus and standardisation of the content, structure and delivery of such PM training programmes are not yet a reality. Aim: This joint position paper aims to describe the current state of undergraduate medical PM teaching in South Africa and define the PM competencies required for an SA generalist doctor. Setting: Palliative Medicine programme leads and teachers from eight medical schools in South Africa. Methods: A survey exploring the structure, organisation and content of the respective medical undergraduate PM programmes was distributed to PM programme leads and teachers. Results: Responses were received from seven medical schools. Through a process of iterative review, competencies were defined and further grouped according to suitability for the pre-clinical and clinical components of the curriculum. Conclusion: Through mapping out these competencies in a spiralled medical curriculum, the authors hope to provide guidance to medical curriculum designers to effectively integrate PM teaching and learning into current curricula in line with the goals of the SA National Policy Framework and Strategy on Palliative Care (NPFSPC).
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- 2022
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5. Consensus study on the health system and patient-related barriers for lung cancer management in South Africa.
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Witness Mapanga, Shane A Norris, Wenlong C Chen, Charmaine Blanchard, Anita Graham, Laurel Baldwin-Ragaven, Tom Boyles, Bernard Donde, Linda Greef, Ken Huddle, Busisiwe Khumalo, Elizabeth Leepile, Buhle Lubuzo, Raynolda Makhutle, Yusuf Mayet, Merika Tsitsi, Preethi Mistri, Keletso Mmoledi, Mpho Ratshikana-Moloko, Rajen Morer, Lauren Pretorius, Jayshina Punwasi, Guy A Richards, Paul Ruff, Dineo Shabalala, Maureen Sibadela, Nita Soma, Michelle Wong, and Maureen Joffe
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
BackgroundLung cancer is the highest incident cancer globally and is associated with significant morbidity and mortality particularly if identified at a late stage. Poor patient outcomes in low- and middle-income countries (LMIC's) might reflect contextual patient and health system constraints at multiple levels, that act as barriers to prevention, disease recognition, diagnosis, and treatment. Lung cancer screening, even for high-risk patients, is not available in the public health sector in South Africa (SA), where the current HIV and tuberculosis (TB) epidemics often take precedence. Yet, there has been no formal assessment of the individual and health-system related barriers that may delay patients with lung cancer from seeking and accessing help within the public health care system and receiving the appropriate and effective diagnosis and treatment. This study aimed to derive consensus from health-system stakeholders in the urban Gauteng Province of SA on the most important challenges faced by the health services and patients in achieving optimum lung cancer management and to identify potential solutions.MethodsThe study was undertaken among 27 participant stakeholders representing clinical managers, clinicians, opinion leaders from the public health sector and non-governmental organisation (NGO) representatives. The study compromised two components: consensus and engagement. For the consensus component, the Delphi Technique was employed with open-ended questions and item ranking from five rounds of consensus-seeking, to achieve collective agreement on the most important challenges faced by patients and the health services in achieving optimal lung cancer management. For the engagement component, the Nominal Group Technique was used to articulate ideas and reach an agreement on the group's recommendations for solution strategies and approaches.ResultsPublic health sector stakeholders suggested that a lack of knowledge and awareness of lung cancer, and the apparent stigma associated with the disease and its risk factors, as well as symptoms and signs, are critical to treatment delay. Furthermore, delays in up-referral of patients with suspected lung cancer from district health care level were attributed to inadequate knowledge arising from a lack of in-service training of nurses and doctors regarding oncologic symptoms, risk factors, need for further investigation, interpretation of x-rays and available treatments. At a tertiary level, participants suggested that insufficient availability of specialised diagnostic resources (imaging, cytological and pathological services including biomolecular assessment of lung cancer), theatres, cardiothoracic surgeons, and appropriate therapeutic modalities (chemotherapeutic agents and radiation oncology) are the main barriers to the provision of optimal care. It was suggested that a primary prevention programme initiated by the government that involves private-public partnerships may improve lung cancer management nationally.ConclusionsConsiderable barriers to the early identification and treatment of lung cancer exist. Finding solutions to overcome both individual and health-system level obstacles to lung cancer screening and management are vital to facilitate early identification and treatment, and to improve survival. Furthermore, research on inexpensive biomarkers for asymptomatic disease detection, the introduction of diagnostic imaging tools that utilise artificial intelligence to compensate for inadequate human resources and improving clinical integration across all levels of the healthcare system are essential.
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- 2021
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6. Illness Understanding and End-of-Life Care Communication and Preferences for Patients With Advanced Cancer in South Africa
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Megan Johnson Shen, Holly G. Prigerson, Mpho Ratshikana-Moloko, Keletso Mmoledi, Paul Ruff, Judith S. Jacobson, Alfred I. Neugut, Jamila Amanfu, Herbert Cubasch, Michelle Wong, Maureen Joffe, and Charmaine Blanchard
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Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Purpose: The understanding of patients with cancer of their condition and their wishes regarding care as they approach end of life (EoL) have been studied more in high-income countries than in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). Patients and Methods: Data were analyzed from a cohort study (N = 221) of patients with advanced cancer who were recruited from a palliative care center in Soweto, South Africa (LMIC), between May 2016 and June 2017. Patients were asked about their understanding of their illness, estimated life expectancy, EoL care communication, and EoL care preferences. Results: Only 13 patients (5.9%) acknowledged that they were terminally ill; nine patients (4.1%) estimated accurately that they had months, not years, left to live. A total of 216 patients (97.7%) reported that they had not had an EoL care discussion with their physician, and 170 patients (76.9%) did not want to know their prognosis even if the doctor knew it. Most patients preferred comfort care (72.9%; n = 161) to life-extending care (14.0%; n = 31), and did not want to be kept alive using extreme measures (80.5%; n = 178) or have their doctors do everything possible to extend their lives (78.3%; n = 173). Finally, 127 patients (57.5%) preferred to die at home, and 51 (23.1%) preferred to die in the hospital. Most patients (81.0%; n = 179) had funeral plans. Conclusion: South African patients demonstrated less awareness of the fact that they were terminally ill, were less likely to have discussed their prognosis with their doctor, and more strongly preferred comfort care to life-extending EoL care than US and other LMIC patients in prior research. These differences highlight the need for culturally appropriate, patient-centered EoL care for South African patients with advanced cancer as well as to determine individual preferences and needs in all EoL settings.
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- 2018
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7. Consensus study on the health system and patient-related barriers for lung cancer management in South Africa
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Keletso Mmoledi, Ken R L Huddle, Wenlong C. Chen, Mpho Ratshikana-Moloko, Shane A. Norris, Preethi Mistri, Paul Ruff, Tom H. Boyles, Rajen Morer, Jayshina Punwasi, Linda Greef, Merika Tsitsi, Busisiwe Khumalo, Maureen Sibadela, Nita Soma, Buhle Lubuzo, Michelle L. Wong, Elizabeth Leepile, Anita Graham, Dineo Shabalala, Witness Mapanga, Guy A. Richards, Raynolda Makhutle, Laurel Baldwin-Ragaven, B. Donde, Charmaine Blanchard, Yusuf Mayet, Maureen Joffe, and Lauren Pretorius
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Consensus ,Lung Neoplasms ,Delphi Technique ,Science ,Cancer Treatment ,Disease ,Treatment of lung cancer ,Public-Private Sector Partnerships ,Lung and Intrathoracic Tumors ,South Africa ,Diagnostic Medicine ,Health care ,Nominal group technique ,medicine ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Cancer Detection and Diagnosis ,Humans ,Public and Occupational Health ,Lung cancer ,Multidisciplinary ,business.industry ,Public health ,Health Services Administration and Management ,Urban Health ,Cancer ,Cancers and Neoplasms ,medicine.disease ,Health Care ,Oncology ,Health Care Facilities ,Family medicine ,Tuberculosis Diagnosis and Management ,Medicine ,business ,Delivery of Health Care ,Lung cancer screening ,Research Article - Abstract
Background Lung cancer is the highest incident cancer globally and is associated with significant morbidity and mortality particularly if identified at a late stage. Poor patient outcomes in low- and middle-income countries (LMIC’s) might reflect contextual patient and health system constraints at multiple levels, that act as barriers to prevention, disease recognition, diagnosis, and treatment. Lung cancer screening, even for high-risk patients, is not available in the public health sector in South Africa (SA), where the current HIV and tuberculosis (TB) epidemics often take precedence. Yet, there has been no formal assessment of the individual and health-system related barriers that may delay patients with lung cancer from seeking and accessing help within the public health care system and receiving the appropriate and effective diagnosis and treatment. This study aimed to derive consensus from health-system stakeholders in the urban Gauteng Province of SA on the most important challenges faced by the health services and patients in achieving optimum lung cancer management and to identify potential solutions. Methods The study was undertaken among 27 participant stakeholders representing clinical managers, clinicians, opinion leaders from the public health sector and non-governmental organisation (NGO) representatives. The study compromised two components: consensus and engagement. For the consensus component, the Delphi Technique was employed with open-ended questions and item ranking from five rounds of consensus-seeking, to achieve collective agreement on the most important challenges faced by patients and the health services in achieving optimal lung cancer management. For the engagement component, the Nominal Group Technique was used to articulate ideas and reach an agreement on the group’s recommendations for solution strategies and approaches. Results Public health sector stakeholders suggested that a lack of knowledge and awareness of lung cancer, and the apparent stigma associated with the disease and its risk factors, as well as symptoms and signs, are critical to treatment delay. Furthermore, delays in up-referral of patients with suspected lung cancer from district health care level were attributed to inadequate knowledge arising from a lack of in-service training of nurses and doctors regarding oncologic symptoms, risk factors, need for further investigation, interpretation of x-rays and available treatments. At a tertiary level, participants suggested that insufficient availability of specialised diagnostic resources (imaging, cytological and pathological services including biomolecular assessment of lung cancer), theatres, cardiothoracic surgeons, and appropriate therapeutic modalities (chemotherapeutic agents and radiation oncology) are the main barriers to the provision of optimal care. It was suggested that a primary prevention programme initiated by the government that involves private-public partnerships may improve lung cancer management nationally. Conclusions Considerable barriers to the early identification and treatment of lung cancer exist. Finding solutions to overcome both individual and health-system level obstacles to lung cancer screening and management are vital to facilitate early identification and treatment, and to improve survival. Furthermore, research on inexpensive biomarkers for asymptomatic disease detection, the introduction of diagnostic imaging tools that utilise artificial intelligence to compensate for inadequate human resources and improving clinical integration across all levels of the healthcare system are essential.
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- 2021
8. Redefining Palliative Care-A New Consensus-Based Definition
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Carlos Centeno, Quach T. Khan, Liliana De Lima, Katherine Pettus, Jin-Sun Yong, Lukas Radbruch, Julia Downing, Roberto Wenk, Dingle Spence, M. R. Rajagopal, Richard Harding, Esther Munyoro, James F. Cleary, Kathleen M. Foley, Mhoira Leng, Roger Woodruff, Sébastien Moine, Odette Spruijt, Claudia Burla, Zipporah Ali, Phillippe Larkin, Christina M. Puchalski, Hibah Osman, Sushma Bhatnaghar, Bee Wee, Wendy Gomez-Garcia, Chitra Venkateswaran, Joan Marston, Charmaine Blanchard, Emmanuel Luyirika, Stephen R. Connor, Rosa Buitrago, Tania Pastrana, Eduardo Bruera, Odontuya Davaasuren, Mary Callaway, Felicia Marie Knaul, and Cynthia Goh
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Consensus ,Palliative care ,Definition of palliative care ,Delphi method ,Context (language use) ,Commission ,Phase (combat) ,Article ,World health ,low or middle income countries ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Quality of life ,Nursing ,relief of suffering ,Health care ,Humans ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,General Nursing ,business.industry ,Palliative Care ,Hospice Care ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,quality of life ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Hospice and Palliative Care Nursing ,Quality of Life ,consensus ,Neurology (clinical) ,business - Abstract
Background: The International Association for Hospice and Palliative Care (IAHPC) developed a consensus-based definition of palliative care (PC) that focuses on the relief of serious health related suffering, a concept put forward by the Lancet Commission Global Access to Palliative Care and Pain Relief. Aim: The objective of this paper is to present the research behind the new definition. Methods: The three-phased consensus process involved health care workers from countries in all income levels. In phase one, 38 PC experts evaluated the components of the World Health Organization (WHO) definition and suggested new/revised ones. In phase two, 412 IAHPC members in 88 countries expressed their level of agreement with the suggested components. In phase three, using results from phase two, the expert panel developed the definition. Results: The consensus-based definition is “Palliative care is the active holistic care of individuals across all ages with serious health-related suffering due to severe illness and especially of those near the end of life. It aims to improve the quality of life of patients, their families and their caregivers.” The definition includes a number of bullet points with additional details as well as recommendations for governments to reduce barriers to palliative care. Conclusions: Participants had significantly different perceptions and interpretations of PC. The greatest challenge faced by the core group was trying to find a middle ground between those who think that PC is the relief of all suffering, and those who believe that PC describes the care of those with a very limited remaining life span.
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- 2020
9. Informal Caregiver Challenges for Advanced Cancer Patients During End-of-Life Care in Johannesburg, South Africa and Distinctions Based on Place of Death
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Paul Ruff, Jones Omoshoro-Jones, Paul E. Sackstein, Keletso Mmoledi, Craig D. Blinderman, Daniel S. O’Neil, Mpho Ratshikana-Moloko, Judith S. Jacobson, Jacob M. Tsitsi, Alfred I. Neugut, Michelle L. Wong, Holly G. Prigerson, Maureen Joffe, Charmaine Blanchard, Herbert Cubasch, and Mfanelo Sobekwa
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Palliative care ,Home Nursing ,Emotions ,Context (language use) ,Urinary incontinence ,Article ,Cohort Studies ,South Africa ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Cost of Illness ,Neoplasms ,medicine ,Global health ,Humans ,Terminally Ill ,Fecal incontinence ,030212 general & internal medicine ,General Nursing ,Terminal Care ,business.industry ,Odds ratio ,Middle Aged ,Death ,Hospitalization ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Caregivers ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Family medicine ,Public hospital ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,business ,End-of-life care - Abstract
Context In sub-Saharan Africa, late diagnosis with cancer is common. Many dying patients rely on family members for care; little is known about the challenges African informal caregivers face. Objectives To better understand the challenges of informal caregivers at the end of life in South Africa, both at home and in inpatient facilities. Methods We included advanced cancer patients and caregivers from a public hospital in Johannesburg, South Africa. Study nurses interviewed patients and caregivers about their experiences. Using univariate and multivariate analyses, we determined the factors associated with greater caregiver difficulty, focusing on patients dying at home vs. in inpatient facilities. Results Among 174 informal caregivers, 62 (36%) reported "a lot" of challenges. These caregivers struggled most with keeping the patient clean (16%) and with patient interactions (34%). Symptoms associated with greater difficulty included pain (odds ratio [OR] 2.4 [95% CI 1.2–4.7]), urinary incontinence (OR 2.3 [95% CI 1.1–4.9]), fecal incontinence (OR 2.4 [95% CI 1.0–5.7]), insomnia (OR 2.9 [95% CI 1.3–6.9]), fatigue (OR 6.3 [95% CI 1.8–21.6]), extremity weakness (OR 2.9 [95% CI 1.3–6.9]), shame (OR 4.2 [95% CI 1.5–12.0]), and sadness (OR 2.3 [95% CI 1.1–4.8]). Caregivers of patients dying at home reported the greatest difficulty with patients' physical symptoms; caregivers of those dying in facilities reported the greatest difficulty with emotional symptoms. Conclusion Informal caregivers of patients dying at home reported challenges with practical functional care; this effect was reduced in the inpatient setting. Skills training for these caregivers could relieve some of this burden.
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- 2018
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10. Validating an instrument for direct patient reporting of chemotherapy toxicity among South African cancer patients
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Paul Ruff, Maureen Joffe, Charmaine Blanchard, Keletso Mmoledi, Georgia Demetriou, Daniel S. O’Neil, Michael H. Antoni, and Gilberto Lopes
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Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Chemotherapy ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Cancer ,Patient reporting ,medicine.disease ,Oncology ,Quality of life ,Toxicity ,medicine ,Intensive care medicine ,business - Abstract
172 Background: In the USA, use of patient-reported outcome (PRO) instruments for monitoring treatment toxicity has been associated with improved patient quality of life (QoL) and clinical outcomes. No similar PRO tools exist for the African cancer patients. We aimed to validate the Patient Reported Symptoms – South Africa (PRS-SA) survey, a novel PRO tool designed to measure subjective stress and symptoms in South African (SA) cancer patients receiving chemotherapy. Methods: We enrolled patients receiving chemotherapy at the oncology clinic at Charlotte Maxeke Hospital, Johannesburg. At 3 separate visits, participants completed the PRS-SA survey, which allowed reporting of stress on a numerical ranking scale (range 0-10) and severity of 11 common chemotherapy-related symptoms (i.e., pain, fatigue, fever, dyspnea, cough, mucositis, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, constipation, and neuropathy) using lay language descriptions corresponding to Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events grades. They simultaneously completed the EORTC Core Quality of Life Questionnaire (QLQ-C30), the Global Impression of Change (GIC) questionnaire, and the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS). All instruments were offered in English and isiZulu. We constructed a receiver operator characteristics (ROC) curve for stress scale values and a total HADS score ≥15, representing clinical depression/anxiety. We evaluated construct validity for each symptom item by comparing symptom severity to the simultaneous QLQ-C30 summary score (Pearson correlation tests) and ECOG performance status (PS) (Mann-Whitney U tests). We assessed symptom item responsiveness by comparing change in severity across visits to change in QLQ-C30 summary score and comparing standardized mean symptom scores in those reporting negative, no, or positive change on the GIC using a Jockheere-Terpstra trend test. Results: Overall, 196 participants completed instruments at visit 1, 173 at visit 2, and 150 at visit 3. Area under the ROC curve for stress score was 0.76, and a score of 4 had 82% sensitivity and 55% specificity for clinical depression/anxiety. All symptom items showed construct validity by association with QLQ-C30 score (all p-values < 0.0001), and all but mucositis showed validity by association with ECOG PS (highest p = 0.03). All but cough showed responsiveness to change in QLQ-C30 score (highest p = 0.045), and the standardized mean in symptom scores demonstrated a trend across negative, neutral, and positive GIC scores (p = 0.03). Conclusions: In SA cancer patients, the PRS-SA’s stress scale behaves similarly to the distress thermometer in other populations, and the symptom items demonstrated construct validity and responsiveness. Further research should address implementation of the PRS-SA in the clinical setting for monitoring cancer treatment-related toxicity and its impact of patients’ QoL and outcomes.
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- 2021
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11. Spiritual Care, Pain Reduction, and Preferred Place of Death Among Advanced Cancer Patients in Soweto, South Africa
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Witness Mapanga, Mpho Ratshikana-Moloko, Paul Ruff, Maureen Joffe, Charmaine Blanchard, Michelle L. Wong, Holly G. Prigerson, Keletso Mmoledi, Judith S. Jacobson, Alfred I. Neugut, Oluwatosin Ayeni, Jacob M. Tsitsi, Daniel S. O’Neil, Herbert Cubasch, Tracy A. Balboni, and Mfanelo Sobekwa
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Palliative care ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Pain ,Context (language use) ,Logistic regression ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,South Africa ,0302 clinical medicine ,Quality of life (healthcare) ,Neoplasms ,medicine ,Humans ,Spirituality ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Prospective Studies ,Prospective cohort study ,General Nursing ,media_common ,Terminal Care ,business.industry ,Palliative Care ,Odds ratio ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Family medicine ,Quality of Life ,Neurology (clinical) ,Spiritual care ,Worry ,business - Abstract
Context When religious and spiritual (R/S) care needs of patients with advanced disease are met, their quality of life (QoL) improves. We studied the association between R/S support and QoL of patients with cancer at the end of life in Soweto, South Africa. Objectives To identify R/S needs among patients with advanced cancer receiving palliative care services and to assess associations of receipt of R/S care with patient QoL and place of death. Methods A prospective cohort study conducted from May 1, 2016 to April 30, 2018 at a tertiary hospital in Soweto, South Africa. Nurses enrolled patients with advanced cancer and referred them to the palliative care multidisciplinary team. Spiritual counselors assessed and provided spiritual care to patients. We compared sociodemographic, clinical, and R/S factors and QoL of R/S care recipients and others. Results Of 233 deceased participants, 92 (39.5%) had received R/S care. Patients who received R/S care reported less pain (2.82 ± 1.23 vs. 1.93 ± 1.69), used less morphine, and were more likely to die at home than patients who did not (57.5% compared with 33.7%). On multivariate logistic regression analysis, adjusting for significant confounding influences and baseline African Palliative Care Association Palliative care Outcome Scale scores, receipt of spiritual care was associated with reduced pain and family worry (odds ratio 0.33; 95% CI 0.11–0.95 and odds ratio 3.43; 95% CI 1.10–10.70, respectively). Conclusion Patients with cancer have R/S needs. R/S care among our patients appeared to improve their end-of-life experience. More research is needed to determine the mechanisms by which R/S care may have improved the observed patient outcomes.
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- 2019
12. Access to Cancer Therapeutics in Low- and Middle-Income Countries
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Paul Ruff, Charmaine Blanchard, Sana Al-Sukhun, and Lawrence N. Shulman
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0301 basic medicine ,Economic growth ,media_common.quotation_subject ,MEDLINE ,Developing country ,Harmonization ,World Health Organization ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Nursing ,Neoplasms ,Health care ,medicine ,Humans ,Developing Countries ,media_common ,Pharmaceutical industry ,business.industry ,Addiction ,Cancer ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,030104 developmental biology ,Low and middle income countries ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,business ,Delivery of Health Care - Abstract
Cancer is rapidly becoming a major health care problem, especially in developing countries, where 60% of the world’s total new cases are diagnosed. The success of new antineoplastic medicines and modern radiation devices to cure a good proportion of patients with cancer and to alleviate the suffering of many more has been achieved at a dramatic cost. Therefore, it has become mandatory for health care authorities and pharmaceutical companies to cooperate to use and develop resources in an efficient manner to improve health care delivery to patients with cancer worldwide. Regulatory harmonization is an important key to overcome delays in the approval process, whether for antineoplastic and pain control medicines or for essential medical devices. More emphasis on the significant role of opiates in pain control among patients with cancer is needed to overcome the ingrained belief in their potential for addiction. The World Health Organization (WHO) serves an important role in guiding priorities for health care and efficiently allocating resources by providing essential medicine lists (EMLs) and device lists. However, the financial challenge for access to health care is multi-tiered and requires collaboration between key stakeholders including pharmaceutical industry, local national health authorities, WHO, and other nonprofit, patient-oriented organizations.
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- 2016
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13. A Prospective Cohort Study of Factors Associated With Place of Death Among Patients With Late-Stage Cancer in Southern Africa
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Keletso Mmoledi, Judith S. Jacobson, Mpho Ratshikana-Moloko, Maureen Joffe, Charmaine Blanchard, Holly G. Prigerson, Oluwatosin Ayeni, Paul E. Sackstein, Paul Ruff, Alfred I. Neugut, and Daniel S. O’Neil
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Male ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Palliative care ,Attitude to Death ,Late-stage cancer ,Terminally ill ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,South Africa ,0302 clinical medicine ,Neoplasms ,medicine ,Humans ,Terminally Ill ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Prospective Studies ,Prospective cohort study ,General Nursing ,Terminal Care ,Kappa value ,business.industry ,Palliative Care ,Age Factors ,Odds ratio ,Middle Aged ,Advanced cancer ,Death ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Caregivers ,Place of death ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
CONTEXT. Identifying factors that affect terminally ill patients’ preferences for and actual place of death may assist patients to die wherever they wish. OBJECTIVE. The objective of this study was to investigate factors associated with preferred and actual place of death for cancer patients in Johannesburg, South Africa. METHODS. In a prospective cohort study at a tertiary hospital in Johannesburg, South Africa, adult patients with advanced cancer and their caregivers were enrolled from 2016 to 2018. Study nurses interviewed the patients at enrollment and conducted postmortem interviews with the caregivers. RESULTS. Of 324 patients enrolled, 191 died during follow-up. Preferred place of death was home for 127 (66.4%) and a facility for 64 (33.5%) patients; 91 (47.6%) patients died in their preferred setting, with a kappa value of congruence of 0.016 (95% CI = −0.107, 0.139). Factors associated with congruence were increasing age (odds ratio [OR]: 1.03, 95% CI: 1.00–1.05), use of morphine (OR: 1.87, 95% CI: 1.04–3.36), and wanting to die at home (OR: 0.44, 95% CI: 0.24–0.82). Dying at home was associated with increasing age (OR 1.03, 95% CI 1.00–1.05) and with the patient wishing to have family and/or friends present at death (OR 6.73, 95% CI 2.97–15.30). CONCLUSION. Most patients preferred to die at home, but most died in hospital and fewer than half died in their preferred setting. Further research on modifiable factors, such as effective communication, access to palliative care and morphine, may ensure that more cancer patients in South Africa die wherever they wish. J Pain Symptom Manage 2019;57:923–932. © 2019 American Academy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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- 2018
14. Illness Understanding and End-of-Life Care Communication and Preferences for Patients With Advanced Cancer in South Africa
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Alfred I. Neugut, Judith S. Jacobson, Keletso Mmoledi, Jamila Amanfu, Herbert Cubasch, Holly G. Prigerson, Paul Ruff, Mpho Ratshikana-Moloko, Michelle L. Wong, Maureen Joffe, Charmaine Blanchard, and Megan Johnson Shen
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Male ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Palliative care ,MEDLINE ,Terminally ill ,lcsh:RC254-282 ,03 medical and health sciences ,South Africa ,0302 clinical medicine ,Neoplasms ,Original Reports ,Medicine ,Humans ,Terminally Ill ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Physician-Patient Relations ,Terminal Care ,business.industry ,Palliative Care ,Cancer ,Patient Preference ,Middle Aged ,lcsh:Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,medicine.disease ,Advanced cancer ,humanities ,3. Good health ,Oncology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Family medicine ,Life expectancy ,Female ,business ,End-of-life care ,Cohort study - Abstract
Purpose The understanding of patients with cancer of their condition and their wishes regarding care as they approach end of life (EoL) have been studied more in high-income countries than in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). Patients and Methods Data were analyzed from a cohort study (N = 221) of patients with advanced cancer who were recruited from a palliative care center in Soweto, South Africa (LMIC), between May 2016 and June 2017. Patients were asked about their understanding of their illness, estimated life expectancy, EoL care communication, and EoL care preferences. Results Only 13 patients (5.9%) acknowledged that they were terminally ill; nine patients (4.1%) estimated accurately that they had months, not years, left to live. A total of 216 patients (97.7%) reported that they had not had an EoL care discussion with their physician, and 170 patients (76.9%) did not want to know their prognosis even if the doctor knew it. Most patients preferred comfort care (72.9%; n = 161) to life-extending care (14.0%; n = 31), and did not want to be kept alive using extreme measures (80.5%; n = 178) or have their doctors do everything possible to extend their lives (78.3%; n = 173). Finally, 127 patients (57.5%) preferred to die at home, and 51 (23.1%) preferred to die in the hospital. Most patients (81.0%; n = 179) had funeral plans. Conclusion South African patients demonstrated less awareness of the fact that they were terminally ill, were less likely to have discussed their prognosis with their doctor, and more strongly preferred comfort care to life-extending EoL care than US and other LMIC patients in prior research. These differences highlight the need for culturally appropriate, patient-centered EoL care for South African patients with advanced cancer as well as to determine individual preferences and needs in all EoL settings.
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- 2018
15. Cancer Therapy in Developing Countries: The Role of Palliative Care
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Richard A Powell, M. R. Rajagopal, Stephen R. Connor, Charmaine Blanchard, and Liliana De Lima
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Service (business) ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Palliative care ,Latin Americans ,business.industry ,Public health ,Cancer therapy ,Developing country ,Cancer ,Disease ,medicine.disease ,Family medicine ,Medicine ,business ,Intensive care medicine - Abstract
Most cancers occur in developing countries, with 60 % of cancer cases and 70 % of cancer deaths occurring in Africa, Asia and Central and South America, where the disease is increasingly a public health concerngiven the regions’ populous nature and often deficient preventive and curative oncological approaches and treatment access. Palliative care has often been forced to occupy the service gap left by inadequate oncology services. However, palliative care service provision and patient coverage in developing regionsis at best variable. This chapter discusses the status of palliative care services in Africa, Eastern Europe, India and Latin America, before exploring its role in addressing the needs of patients with non-cancer and cancer diagnoses, and the potentially beneficial emphasis on primary prevention in combination with enhanced palliative care services for patients with a cancer diagnosis as part of an overall cancer control strategy.
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- 2015
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16. Guide to the treatment of cancer pain in South Africa
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Charmaine Blanchard, Sean Chetty, Linda Ganca, Elizabeth Gwyther, Eric Hodgson, Peter Kamerman, Michelle Meiring, Vinay Sharma, David Webb, Charmaine Blanchard, Sean Chetty, Linda Ganca, Elizabeth Gwyther, Eric Hodgson, Peter Kamerman, Michelle Meiring, Vinay Sharma, and David Webb
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- 2015
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17. Guide to the treatment of cancer pain in South Africa. DOI: 10.6084/m9.figshare.1612170
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Charmaine Blanchard, Sean Chetty, Linda Ganca, Elizabeth Gwyther, Eric Hodgson, Peter Kamerman, Michelle Meiring, Vinay Sharma, David Webb, Charmaine Blanchard, Sean Chetty, Linda Ganca, Elizabeth Gwyther, Eric Hodgson, Peter Kamerman, Michelle Meiring, Vinay Sharma, and David Webb
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- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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