Cancer patient experience measures: An evidence review.

J Psychosoc Oncol

a Faculty of Health, Centre for Health Services Management, University of Technology Sydney, Sydney , Australia.

Published: August 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • This research investigates current instruments for measuring cancer patients' experiences with health care, focusing on the number, domains, structure, and psychometric performance of these tools.
  • A narrative synthesis method was used to collect evidence from various studies involving cancer patients at different disease stages and across multiple cancer types.
  • The review found a limited number of well-validated instruments, highlighting a need for further development and validation of tools that accurately reflect cancer patients' healthcare experiences to enhance care quality.

Article Abstract

Objectives: This research investigates the instruments currently available to measure the cancer patient experience of health care. An investigation of the number of instruments, the domains covered by the instruments, and the structure and psychometric performance of instruments is undertaken.

Methods: A narrative synthesis approach is used to gather evidence from multiple studies and explain the findings. Purposely broad search terms and strategies are used to capture studies with cancer patients at all stages of disease and across a range of cancer types and health care settings.

Results: The majority of identified instruments were originally designed for the oncology field. Twelve of the studies developed new cancer patient measures; eight studies adapted existing or utilized items from existing instruments, and seven studies assessed the psychometric properties of existing instruments or assessed validated tools under different conditions (e.g., cross-cultural adaptation). The number of instruments assessing cancer patient experience that have sound psychometric properties across items was found to be low. The properties least tested are test-retest reliability, construct, convergent and discriminant validity, scale variability (floor/ceiling effects), and interpretability.

Conclusion: This review examined 10 years of research on the development of instruments to measure the cancer patient experience of health care. It found that research in this area is still in early stages of development. Further inquiry based on development and validation of cancer patient experience measures is required to support improvements in cancer care based on the perspective of cancer patients.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/07347332.2016.1157717DOI Listing

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