COVID-19 recovery: implications for cancer care clinicians
Details
Publication Year 2022-02,Volume 30,Issue #2,Page 1003-1006
Journal Title
Supportive Care in Cancer
Publication Type
Commentary
Abstract
The wellbeing of clinicians delivering cancer care needs to be considered and included in recovery roadmaps from the COVID-19 pandemic. In this paper, we refer to a report undertaken by Cancer Australia to review and reflect on the impact of COVID-19 in the delivery of cancer care. The report focused on post COVID-19 recovery and asked 3 questions: What changed? What has been the impact of that change? And how can high-value changes be embedded or enhanced? We suggest the same three questions should also be asked of cancer care clinicians. Using the three Cancer Australia questions, we draw from clinicians' insights collected through the Victorian COVID-19 Cancer Network (VCCN) and from the wider health professional literature. We summarise key features of the COVID-19 experience for cancer care clinicians, highlighting moral distress, fatigue and disrupted practice. We then discuss how pandemic-related ethical values might guide health leaders and administrators to balance support for clinician wellbeing with ongoing delivery of cancer care for patients.
Keywords
*covid-19; Health Personnel; Humans; *Neoplasms/therapy; Pandemics; SARS-CoV-2; Covid-19; Cancer care clinicians; Ethics; Recovery
Department(s)
Chief Medical Officer
PubMed ID
34626251
Open Access at Publisher's Site
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00520-021-06600-3
Terms of Use/Rights Notice
Refer to copyright notice on published article.


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