A cross-sector approach to explore socio-ecological associations with treatment engagement behaviours in Northern Ghana.

Cancer Ghana analysis of hospital data cancer service engagement retrospective treatment behaviours

Journal

Journal of cancer policy
ISSN: 2213-5383
Titre abrégé: J Cancer Policy
Pays: England
ID NLM: 101639933

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
24 Jul 2024
Historique:
received: 18 04 2024
revised: 10 06 2024
accepted: 14 07 2024
medline: 27 7 2024
pubmed: 27 7 2024
entrez: 26 7 2024
Statut: aheadofprint

Résumé

Cancer presents a growing global burden, not least in African countries such as Ghana where high cancer treatment dropouts has been identified due to numerous social, cultural and financial reasons. There is little understanding regarding patterns of treatment access behaviour, especially in Northern Ghana, which this study was designed to explore. Through cross-sector collaboration, we extracted and clinically validated cancer patient records available in the Tamale Teaching Hospital. These were analysed descriptively and through multi-variate logistic regression. A treatment mapping process was also applied to highlight challenges in data collection. Multiple imputation with chained equations was conducted for high levels of missing data. Sensitivity analysis was applied to assess the impact of missing data. Treatment drop-out was high even when uncertainty due to missing data was accounted for, and only 27% of patients completely engaged with treatment. High drop-out was found for all cancers including those covered by the Ghana National Health Insurance scheme. Multi-variate logistic regression revealed that social, health condition and systemic factors influence treatment engagement until completion. High missing data was observed for liver, ovarian, colorectal, gastric, bladder, oesophageal and head and neck and skin cancers, and soft tissue sarcomas, which limited model fitting. Treatment drop-out is a critical issue in Northern Ghana. There was high missing data due to the dynamic, complex and decentralised treatment pathway. Future studies are needed to understand the complex challenges in data recording. Treatment drop out is a pertinent issue that policy makers should look to address. Further discussion with stakeholders involved in cancer treatment and data collection is required to better understand challenges to routine data collection in the local setting. This will allow policy to be designed to cater for the impact of multiple intersecting health and social factors on treatment completion.

Sections du résumé

BACKGROUND BACKGROUND
Cancer presents a growing global burden, not least in African countries such as Ghana where high cancer treatment dropouts has been identified due to numerous social, cultural and financial reasons. There is little understanding regarding patterns of treatment access behaviour, especially in Northern Ghana, which this study was designed to explore.
METHODS METHODS
Through cross-sector collaboration, we extracted and clinically validated cancer patient records available in the Tamale Teaching Hospital. These were analysed descriptively and through multi-variate logistic regression. A treatment mapping process was also applied to highlight challenges in data collection. Multiple imputation with chained equations was conducted for high levels of missing data. Sensitivity analysis was applied to assess the impact of missing data.
RESULTS RESULTS
Treatment drop-out was high even when uncertainty due to missing data was accounted for, and only 27% of patients completely engaged with treatment. High drop-out was found for all cancers including those covered by the Ghana National Health Insurance scheme. Multi-variate logistic regression revealed that social, health condition and systemic factors influence treatment engagement until completion. High missing data was observed for liver, ovarian, colorectal, gastric, bladder, oesophageal and head and neck and skin cancers, and soft tissue sarcomas, which limited model fitting.
CONCLUSION CONCLUSIONS
Treatment drop-out is a critical issue in Northern Ghana. There was high missing data due to the dynamic, complex and decentralised treatment pathway. Future studies are needed to understand the complex challenges in data recording.
POLICY SUMMARY UNASSIGNED
Treatment drop out is a pertinent issue that policy makers should look to address. Further discussion with stakeholders involved in cancer treatment and data collection is required to better understand challenges to routine data collection in the local setting. This will allow policy to be designed to cater for the impact of multiple intersecting health and social factors on treatment completion.

Identifiants

pubmed: 39059764
pii: S2213-5383(24)00031-6
doi: 10.1016/j.jcpo.2024.100497
pii:
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

100497

Informations de copyright

Copyright © 2024. Published by Elsevier Ltd.

Déclaration de conflit d'intérêts

Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper. Competing interests The authors declare no conflicts of interest in undertaking this research.

Auteurs

Chloe Tuck (C)

Division of Population Health, Sheffield Centre for Health and Related Research, School of Medicine and Population Health, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK. Electronic address: cztuck1@sheffield.ac.uk.

Laura Gray (L)

Division of Population Health, Sheffield Centre for Health and Related Research, School of Medicine and Population Health, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK.

Hamza Suraj (H)

Tamale Teaching Hospital, Tamale, Ghana.

Abdul-Rashid Timtoni Iddrisu (AT)

Tamale Teaching Hospital, Tamale, Ghana.

Tampuri Rahman Abane (TR)

Tamale Teaching Hospital, Tamale, Ghana.

Richmond Aryeetey (R)

School of Public Health, University of Ghana, Accra, Ghana.

Braimah Abubakari Baba (BA)

Ghana Health Service, Northern Regional Health Directorate, Tamale, Ghana.

Robert Akparibo (R)

Division of Population Health, Sheffield Centre for Health and Related Research, School of Medicine and Population Health, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK.

Richard Cooper (R)

Tamale Teaching Hospital, Tamale, Ghana.

Classifications MeSH