AI Article Synopsis

  • The project aimed to improve support for childhood cancer survivors experiencing neurocognitive late effects by engaging parents, healthcare providers, and educators to identify research priorities regarding communication about these impacts.
  • Using a combination of the SEED method and e-Delphi consensus approach, stakeholders participated in various engagement activities, resulting in the generation of 8 key research questions over the course of a year.
  • The findings highlight the effectiveness of this collaborative process, offering a framework that can be applied to other healthcare challenges while addressing gaps in care for children facing neurocognitive issues.

Article Abstract

Objective: Supporting childhood cancer survivors with neurocognitive late effects is critical and requires additional attention in the research arena. This convening project's aim was to engage parents, healthcare providers, and education stakeholders in order to identify research priorities regarding patient/family-provider communication about neurocognitive impacts associated with childhood cancer.

Methods: Specific components of the Stakeholder Engagement in quEstion Development (SEED) method were combined with an online e-Delphi consensus building approach. Multiple modalities were utilized for engagement including in-person/hybrid meetings, email/Zoom/call communications, targeted-asynchronous learning activities by stakeholders, iterative surveys, and hands-on conceptual modeling.

Results: Twenty-four (parents n = 10, educators n = 5, healthcare providers n = 9) participated in the year-long project, generating 8 research questions in the stakeholder priority domains of training families/caregiver, access of neuropsychological assessment, tools to facilitate communication and training medical providers.

Conclusions: This paper illustrates a successful stakeholder convening process using multi-modal engagement to establish research priorities. The resulting questions can be utilized to guide research projects that will fill gaps to providing optimal care to children with neurocognitive late effects.

Practice Implications: This process can be used as a template for tackling other healthcare issues that span across disciplines and domains, where stakeholders have rare opportunities to collaborate.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pec.2023.107935DOI Listing

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