4.6 Review

Facilitating the implementation of empirically valid interventions in psychosocial oncology and supportive care

Journal

SUPPORTIVE CARE IN CANCER
Volume 19, Issue 8, Pages 1097-1105

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00520-011-1159-z

Keywords

Cancer; Psychosocial oncology; Supportive care; Knowledge translation; Interventions

Funding

  1. Canadian Cancer Society Research Institute (CCSRI) [010283]
  2. Canadian Cancer Society (CCS)
  3. CCS/CCSRI Sociobehavioral Cancer Research Network
  4. Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR)
  5. Alberta Heritage Foundation for Medical Research
  6. Canadian Health Services and Research Foundation (CHSRF)

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Purpose Over the past two decades, the fields of psychosocial oncology and supportive care have seen clinically effective tools as underutilized despite proven benefits to cancer patients and their families. The purpose of this paper is to discuss the reasons for the failure of psychosocial and supportive care interventions in oncology to realize broad clinical implementation and to demonstrate how a knowledge management framework offers several advantages for increasing the probability of successful implementation. Methods This paper is based on a systematic review of the literature pertaining to efforts to implement psychosocial oncology and supportive care interventions. Results The struggle to develop, implement, and evaluate promising psychosocial oncology and supportive care innovations has moved academic thought toward the development of models and theories concerning the best ways to move new knowledge into clinical practice. There are critical and common barriers to the successful transfer and implementation of promising interventions, and implementation efforts may be maximized by using knowledge management frameworks to systematically identify and address these barriers. Conclusions The successful implementation of empirically promising interventions requires research networks and practice groups to work together in a concerted, theory-guided effort to identify and address the contextual factors most relevant to any particular intervention. The growing support of knowledge implementation activities by research funders, policy-makers, opinion leaders, and advocates of psychosocial and supportive care interventions is a positive move in this direction.

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