What is it about?
Understanding why and when cancer patients may miss, avoid or discontinue their treatment is a complex multi-factorial phenomenon. This article takes a qualitative approach to examining Author findings found in Cancer Patient Surveys and reports into medication and /or treatment nonadherence. The period referred to dates back to 2003 when the World Health Organisation (WHO) first published a mult-dimensional definition of treatment adherence. The focus of this article is the possible influence of Physician - Patient relationships on cancer patient treatment adherence/nonadherence (i.e., information, communication, concordance). How treatment or medication adherence is defined and the differing priorities of patients and physicians during the disease trajectory are explored.
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Why is it important?
Treatment nonadherence in cancer remains high. Few interventions to reduce treatment nonadherence in cancer patients have been successful or succeed beyond pilot studies or on a large scale. Of particular importance in this review are: (i) The descriptive summaries of key differences that help define both intentional and unintentional treatment nonadherence for future framework development of interventions; (ii) The need to consider Physican factors, as these are not highlighted or shown as a separately identified dimension in the original WHO multi-dimensional overview of treatment adherence (WHO,2003). This scoping review suggests that Physician factors (in terms of the possible influence of Physician/Patient relationships in treatment nonadherence) is understated and hardly represented in the literature.
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This page is a summary of: When can cancer patient treatment nonadherence be considered intentional or unintentional? A scoping review, PLoS ONE, May 2023, PLOS,
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0282180.
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