Author: DeBoer, Rebecca J.; Mutoniwase, Espérance; Nguyen, Cam; Ho, Anita; Umutesi, Grace; Nkusi, Eugene; Sebahungu, Fidele; Van Loon, Katherine; Shulman, Lawrence N.; Shyirambere, Cyprien
Title: Moral Distress and Resilience Associated with Cancer Care Priority Setting in a Resourceâ€Limited Context Cord-id: t6yzih4e Document date: 2021_5_28
ID: t6yzih4e
Snippet: BACKGROUND: Moral distress and burnout are highly prevalent among oncology clinicians. Research is needed to better understand how resource constraints and systemic inequalities contribute to moral distress in order to develop effective mitigation strategies. Oncology providers in low†and middleâ€income countries are well positioned to provide insight into the moral experience of cancer care priority setting and expertise to guide solutions. METHODS: Semistructured interviews were conducted
Document: BACKGROUND: Moral distress and burnout are highly prevalent among oncology clinicians. Research is needed to better understand how resource constraints and systemic inequalities contribute to moral distress in order to develop effective mitigation strategies. Oncology providers in low†and middleâ€income countries are well positioned to provide insight into the moral experience of cancer care priority setting and expertise to guide solutions. METHODS: Semistructured interviews were conducted with a purposive sample of 22 oncology physicians, nurses, program leaders, and clinical advisors at a cancer center in Rwanda. Interviews were recorded, transcribed verbatim, and analyzed using the framework method. RESULTS: Participants identified sources of moral distress at three levels of engagement with resource prioritization: witnessing programâ€level resource constraints drive cancer disparities, implementing priority setting decisions into care of individual patients, and communicating with patients directly about resource prioritization implications. They recommended individual and organizationalâ€level interventions to foster resilience, such as communication skills training and mental health support for clinicians, interdisciplinary team building, fair procedures for priority setting, and collective advocacy for resource expansion and equity. CONCLUSION: This study adds to the current literature an inâ€depth examination of the impact of resource constraints and inequities on clinicians in a lowâ€resource setting. Effective interventions are urgently needed to address moral distress, reduce clinician burnout, and promote wellâ€being among a critical but strained oncology workforce. Collective advocacy is concomitantly needed to address the structural forces that constrain resources unevenly and perpetuate disparities in cancer care and outcomes. IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE: For many oncology clinicians worldwide, resource limitations constrain routine clinical practice and necessitate decisions about prioritizing cancer care. To the authors’ knowledge, this study is the first inâ€depth analysis of how resource constraints and priority setting lead to moral distress among oncology clinicians in a lowâ€resource setting. Effective individual and organizational interventions and collective advocacy for equity in cancer care are urgently needed to address moral distress and reduce clinician burnout among a strained global oncology workforce. Lessons from lowâ€resource settings can be gleaned as highâ€income countries face growing needs to prioritize oncology resources.
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