4.2 Article

Oncology Nursing Symptom Science: Overview of the NINR, ONS, and NCI Symptom Science Colloquium

Journal

ONCOLOGY NURSING FORUM
Volume 49, Issue 2, Pages 105-112

Publisher

ONCOLOGY NURSING SOC
DOI: 10.1188/22.ONF.105-112

Keywords

symptom science; cancer survivorship; palliative and end-of-life care; health disparities

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This article provides an overview of the process, development, and evaluation of a symposium on symptom science sponsored by three organizations. It discusses the goals, collaboration, agenda, and outcomes of the symposium, engaging participants from various fields and featuring expert speakers and poster presentations on the latest research in symptom science and related topics. Recommendations for future collaborations and enhancements in oncology symptom science are also provided based on participant feedback.
This article provides an overview of the process, development, and evaluation of the Symptom Science Colloquium sponsored by the National Institute of Nursing Research, Oncology Nursing Society (ONS), and National Cancer Institute. This colloquium was the first of its kind to leverage the common goals of these institutes to advance oncology symptom science. Specifically. this article will identify the goals of the agencies involved and synergy in forming this collaboration, review the ONS Research Agenda that provided the blueprint for the colloquium. and offer insights and lessons leamed to be used for future planning. The colloquium engaged roughly 500 participants from all levels of clinical (RNs, advanced practice nurses), educational (undergraduate, master's, doctorate), and research (students, faculty, scientists) expertise. Six featured expert speakers and 115 poster presentations focused on the latest research in symptom science. cancer survivorship, palliative and end-of-life care, and hot topics (COVID-19, health disparities). Fourteen networking sessions fostered opportunities to engage with international experts. Special awards emphasized mentee-mentor relationships and exemplary midcareer faculty. Based on this emphasis, the authors provide themes from the successful award applications as exemplars. A summary of participant satisfaction and recommendations for future collaborations to enhance and advance oncology symptom science are provided.

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