Holistic Person-Centered Care in Radiotherapy: Protocol for a Scoping Review
Fatima Bhyat, Andrew Makkink, Karien Henrico

TL;DR
This study aims to explore how radiotherapy can better address patients' overall needs, not just their medical treatment.
Contribution
The paper introduces a scoping review protocol to map literature on holistic, person-centered care in radiotherapy.
Findings
The review will identify gaps in addressing psychosocial needs in radiotherapy.
It will compile strategies for improving holistic care in radiotherapy settings.
Results will inform future research and implementation of patient-centered approaches.
Abstract
Several types of health care professionals are responsible for the care of patients with cancer throughout their engagement with the health care system. One such type is the radiotherapist. The radiotherapist not only administers treatment but is also directly involved with the patient during treatment. Despite this direct contact with the patient, the narrative tends to focus more on technical tasks than the actual patient. This task-focused interaction is often due to the highly sophisticated equipment and complex radiotherapy treatment processes involved. This often results in not meeting the psychosocial needs of the patient, and patients have acknowledged noncompliance and delayed treatment as a result. The scoping review aims to explore, chart, and map the available literature on holistic person-centered care in radiotherapy and to identify and present key concepts, definitions,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPalliative Care and End-of-Life Issues · Advances in Oncology and Radiotherapy · Patient Dignity and Privacy
