Article

Communication to Adult Patients Undergoing Cancer Care by Non-Specialist Nurses: a Scoping Review Protocol

Details

Citation

Kachimanga C, McGlashan J, Cunningham N & Hoyle L (2024) Communication to Adult Patients Undergoing Cancer Care by Non-Specialist Nurses: a Scoping Review Protocol. BMJ Open, 14, Art. No.: e081326. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2023-081326

Abstract
Introduction Little is known regarding how non-specialist nurses communicate with patients living with cancer when the patients are receiving care outside of their cancer units/teams. This scoping review aims to identify, examine and report on the currently available evidence about communication by non-specialist nurses when caring for adults living with cancer outside of their cancer care unit/teams. Methods and analysis A scoping review following the JBI methodology for scoping reviews will be conducted. We will search for empirical studies that meet the inclusion criteria in six databases (MEDLINE, PubMed, CINAHL, Embase, Scopus and PsycINFO). Handsearching in references of included articles will be performed to find additional articles. The population of interest will be non-specialist nurses. Three concepts will be explored, namely (1) all adult patients living with cancer, (2) a focus on three stages of the cancer continuum of care (cancer diagnosis, treatment and survivorship) and (3) a focus on communication between non-specialist nurses and patients living with cancer. We will include studies describing all healthcare settings outside patients’ specialised cancer units or oncology teams. After article selection, two reviewers will independently screen titles and abstracts and perform a full-text article review, risk of bias assessments and data extraction. A third reviewer will resolve all disagreements. A narrative summary will provide an overview of how the results relate to the research aims and questions. The included articles will be limited to English and published between 2012 and 2023. Ethics and dissemination No ethical approval is required since we will use publicly available empirical research sources. This review will provide current research on communication by non-specialist nurses with patients with a cancer diagnosis outside of an oncology setting, evidence that will support effective communication. As such, we aim to disseminate the findings in academic conferences and peer-reviewed journals.

Journal
BMJ Open: Volume 14

StatusPublished
Publication date31/03/2024
Publication date online31/03/2024
Date accepted by journal08/03/2024
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/35874
eISSN2044-6055

People (3)

People

Dr Nicola Cunningham

Dr Nicola Cunningham

Lecturer (MacMillan Cancer Support), Health Sciences Stirling

Dr Louise Hoyle

Dr Louise Hoyle

Senior Lecturer in Nursing, Health Sciences Stirling

Mrs Jennifer McGlashan

Mrs Jennifer McGlashan

Lecturer in Paramedic Science, Health Sciences Stirling