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Do people with disabilities experience disparities in cancer care? A systematic review
by
Kuper, Hannah
, Tosetti, Irene
in
Adult
/ Bias
/ Biology and Life Sciences
/ Breast cancer
/ Cancer
/ Cancer screening
/ Cancer therapies
/ Care and treatment
/ Case reports
/ Cognitive impairment
/ Decision making
/ Delivery of Health Care
/ Diagnosis
/ Disabilities
/ Disability
/ End of life
/ Evaluation
/ Guidelines
/ Health care disparities
/ Health disparities
/ Health services
/ Hospitalization
/ Humans
/ Literature reviews
/ Medical screening
/ Medicine and Health Sciences
/ Meta-analysis
/ Morbidity
/ Mortality
/ Neoplasms - therapy
/ Observational studies
/ Observational Studies as Topic
/ Pain
/ Palliative care
/ Patients
/ People with disabilities
/ Persons with Disabilities
/ Population studies
/ Qualitative research
/ Quality of life
/ Quantitative research
/ Shared decision making
/ Systematic review
2023
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Do people with disabilities experience disparities in cancer care? A systematic review
by
Kuper, Hannah
, Tosetti, Irene
in
Adult
/ Bias
/ Biology and Life Sciences
/ Breast cancer
/ Cancer
/ Cancer screening
/ Cancer therapies
/ Care and treatment
/ Case reports
/ Cognitive impairment
/ Decision making
/ Delivery of Health Care
/ Diagnosis
/ Disabilities
/ Disability
/ End of life
/ Evaluation
/ Guidelines
/ Health care disparities
/ Health disparities
/ Health services
/ Hospitalization
/ Humans
/ Literature reviews
/ Medical screening
/ Medicine and Health Sciences
/ Meta-analysis
/ Morbidity
/ Mortality
/ Neoplasms - therapy
/ Observational studies
/ Observational Studies as Topic
/ Pain
/ Palliative care
/ Patients
/ People with disabilities
/ Persons with Disabilities
/ Population studies
/ Qualitative research
/ Quality of life
/ Quantitative research
/ Shared decision making
/ Systematic review
2023
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Do you wish to request the book?
Do people with disabilities experience disparities in cancer care? A systematic review
by
Kuper, Hannah
, Tosetti, Irene
in
Adult
/ Bias
/ Biology and Life Sciences
/ Breast cancer
/ Cancer
/ Cancer screening
/ Cancer therapies
/ Care and treatment
/ Case reports
/ Cognitive impairment
/ Decision making
/ Delivery of Health Care
/ Diagnosis
/ Disabilities
/ Disability
/ End of life
/ Evaluation
/ Guidelines
/ Health care disparities
/ Health disparities
/ Health services
/ Hospitalization
/ Humans
/ Literature reviews
/ Medical screening
/ Medicine and Health Sciences
/ Meta-analysis
/ Morbidity
/ Mortality
/ Neoplasms - therapy
/ Observational studies
/ Observational Studies as Topic
/ Pain
/ Palliative care
/ Patients
/ People with disabilities
/ Persons with Disabilities
/ Population studies
/ Qualitative research
/ Quality of life
/ Quantitative research
/ Shared decision making
/ Systematic review
2023
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Do people with disabilities experience disparities in cancer care? A systematic review
Journal Article
Do people with disabilities experience disparities in cancer care? A systematic review
2023
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Overview
Over 1.3 billion people, or 16% of the world's population, live with some form of disability. Recent studies have reported that people with disabilities (PwD) might not be receiving state-of-the-art treatment for cancer as their non-disabled peers; our objective was to systematically review this topic.
A systematic review was undertaken to compare cancer outcomes and quality of cancer care between adults with and without disabilities (NIHR Prospero register ID number: CRD42022281506). A search of the literature was performed in July 2022 across five databases: EMBASE, Medline, Cochrane Library, Web of Science and CINAHL databases. Peer-reviewed quantitative research articles, published in English from 2000 to 2022, with interventional or observational study designs, comparing cancer outcomes between a sample of adult patients with disabilities and a sample without disabilities were included. Studies focused on cancer screening and not treatment were excluded, as well as editorials, commentaries, opinion papers, reviews, case reports, case series under 10 patients and conference abstracts. Studies were evaluated by one reviewer for risk of bias based on a set of criteria according to the SIGN 50 guidelines. A narrative synthesis was conducted according to the Cochrane SWiM guidelines, with tables summarizing study characteristics and outcomes. This research received no external funding.
Thirty-one studies were included in the systematic review. Compared to people without disabilities, PwD had worse cancer outcomes, in terms of poorer survival and higher overall and cancer-specific mortality. There was also evidence that PwD received poorer quality cancer care, including lower access to state-of-the-art care or curative-intent therapies, treatment delays, undertreatment or excessively invasive treatment, worse access to in-hospital services, less specialist healthcare utilization, less access to pain medications and inadequate end-of-life quality of care.
Limitations of this work include the exclusion of qualitative research, no assessment of publication bias, selection performed by only one reviewer, results from high-income countries only, no meta-analysis and a high risk of bias in 15% of included studies. In spite of these limitations, our results show that PwD often experience severe disparities in cancer care with less guideline-consistent care and higher mortality than people without disabilities. These findings raise urgent questions about how to ensure equitable care for PwD; in order to prevent avoidable morbidity and mortality, cancer care programs need to be evaluated and urgently improved, with specific training of clinical staff, more disability inclusive research, better communication and shared decision-making with patients and elimination of physical, social and cultural barriers.
Publisher
Public Library of Science,Public Library of Science (PLoS)
Subject
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