Abstract

BackgroundRetinoblastoma, the most common intraocular tumor globally, represents a curable cancer when diagnosed early and treated promptly. Delay to diagnosis, lag time prior to treatment initiation, and abandonment of treatment including upfront treatment refusal, represent stark causes of high retinoblastoma mortality rates in low- and middle- income settings, particularly regions in Africa. While a health delivery-based approach has been a historic focus of retinoblastoma treatments globally and is essential to quality care, this is necessary but not adequate. Retinoblastoma is a compelling disease model to illustrate the potential insights afforded in theory-informed approaches to improve outcomes that integrate public health and oncology perspectives, prioritizing both health service delivery and social efficacy for cure.DiscussionGiven that barriers to appropriate and timely diagnosis and treatment represent main contributors to mortality in children with retinoblastoma in resource-limited settings such as certain areas in Africa, an important priority is to overcome barriers to cure that may be predominantly socially influenced, alongside health delivery-based improvements. While Stages of Change models have been effectively utilized in cancer screening programs within settings of economic and cultural barriers, this application of health behavior theory has been limited to cancer screening rather than a comprehensive framework for treatment completion. Using retinoblastoma as a case example, we propose applying stage-based intervention models in critical stages of care, such as the Precaution Adoption Process Model to decrease delay to diagnosis and a Transtheoretical Model to increase treatment completion rates in resource-limited settings.SummaryStage-based theories recognize that improved cure and survival outcomes will require supportive strategies to progress households, communities, and social and economic institutions from being unaware and unengaged to committed and sustained in their respective roles. Applying a stage-based model lens to programmatic interventions in resource-limited settings has potential for visible improvement in outcomes for children with retinoblastoma and other cancers.

Highlights

  • Retinoblastoma, the most common intraocular tumor globally, represents a curable cancer when diagnosed early and treated promptly

  • Summary: Stage-based theories recognize that improved cure and survival outcomes will require supportive strategies to progress households, communities, and social and economic institutions from being unaware and unengaged to committed and sustained in their respective roles

  • Retinoblastoma has been documented among the top three childhood cancers diagnosed in Tanzania, Ghana, the Congo, and Kenya and as the fourth most common in Senegal [7,8,9,10,11]

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Summary

Discussion

Innovation of stages of change-based approach to retinoblastoma While the innovative emphasis of this paper is to target Stages of Change models for earlier retinoblastoma diagnosis and treatment, effective intervention programs would be blind to reality to not concurrently prioritize health delivery improvements such as creation of multidisciplinary care teams, central pathology review, referral system logistics strengthening, uniform treatment protocols, reliable access to supplies and medications, cost coverage for treatment, and provision of transportation and housing. Therapeutic relationships with social workers and overt reinforcements for families to attend medical appointments may help actualize verbal commitment to treatment This stage may introduce opportunities for group participation in projects to promote rights/services for cancer patients. There should be continued social support, assistance with problem solving, and intervention plans in place for missed appointments or delays in care Supporting families at this stage require creativity and resourcefulness to overcome social, transportation, educational, and financial barriers to treatment completion. The most effective approach to retinoblastoma outcomes in a particular setting will be a framework that impacts all agents: health care policies and insurance coverage, visually-impaired services in medical and social institutions, and partnerships among intra-disciplinary care teams, communities, families, and patients.

Background
Evaluation
Kivela T
Findings
41. World Health Organization
47. World Health Organization

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