Abstract

Cancer survivorship research includes the study of physical, psychosocial, and economic consequences of cancer diagnosis and treatment among pediatric and adult cancer survivors. Historically, the majority of cancer survivorship studies were from the United States, but survivorship issues are increasingly being addressed in other developed countries. Cross-cultural studies remain, however, scarce. The degree to which knowledge attained may or may not be transferred across cultures, countries, or regions is not known. Some important challenges for comparative research are therefore discussed in a cross-cultural perspective. Several substantive and methodological challenges that complicate the execution of cross-cultural cancer survivorship research are presented with examples and discussed to facilitate comparative research efforts in the establishment of new survivorship cohorts and in the planning and implementation of survivorship studies. Comparative research is one key to understanding the nature of cancer survivorship, distinguishing modifiable from nonmodifiable factors at individual, hospital, societal, and system levels and may thus guide appropriate interventions. Lastly, suggested future courses of action within the field of comparative cancer survivorship research are provided.

Highlights

  • The emerging discipline of cancer survivorship research includes the study of the consequences of cancer diagnosis and its treatment among children and adults who have experienced cancer [1]

  • This essay presents an overview of cancer survivorship research and its challenges and discusses in detail three examples of pronounced crosscultural challenges currently facing the field

  • Europe has the highest number of cancer survivors—close to 14 million, while there are about 12 million in Canada and the United States (USA), about 8 million in SouthEastern Asia, but only about 1 million in Oceania [21, 22]

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Summary

Introduction

The emerging discipline of cancer survivorship research includes the study of the consequences of cancer diagnosis and its treatment among children and adults who have experienced cancer [1]. As more countries are beginning to address issues related to adult survivorship [9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20], it will be important to consider how transferrable findings will be across cultures and nations. Identifying generalizable and nongeneralizable research among cultures will hasten what we learn about cancer survivorship. This essay presents an overview of cancer survivorship research and its challenges and discusses in detail three examples of pronounced crosscultural challenges currently facing the field. Future courses of action within the field of comparative cancer survivorship research are suggested

Cancer Survivorship Research
Scope of Today’s Research
Current Challenges
Challenge I
Challenge II
Challenge III
Discussion
Findings
Suggested Future Courses of Action
Conclusion
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