Care Nursing in Immune Disorder Assessment among Adult Oncology Patients: A Scoping Review.

Assessment care immune disorder nursing oncology.

Journal

Endocrine, metabolic & immune disorders drug targets
ISSN: 2212-3873
Titre abrégé: Endocr Metab Immune Disord Drug Targets
Pays: United Arab Emirates
ID NLM: 101269157

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
01 Aug 2024
Historique:
received: 13 01 2024
revised: 29 05 2024
accepted: 10 06 2024
medline: 2 8 2024
pubmed: 2 8 2024
entrez: 2 8 2024
Statut: aheadofprint

Résumé

International guidelines recommend a pathway for preferable nursing handling in a specific cancer topic, like chemotherapy toxicity, low adhesion in toxicity reported with a consequential increase in adverse events (AEs) frequency, poorer QoL outcomes, and increased use of healthcare service until death. Unpredictability, postponed reports, and incapability to access healthcare services can compromise toxicity-related effects by including patients' safety. In this scenario, a more attentive nursing intervention can improve patients' outcomes and decrease costs for healthcare services, respectively. The present scoping review aims to describe and synthesize scientific care nursing evidence assessment in oncology patients. PubMed, Embase, Nursing & Allied Health Database, and British Nursing were the databases examined. Keywords used and associated with Boolean operators were assessment, care, nursing, immune disorder, oncology, and patient. Research articles considered were published between 2013-2023. All systematic processes were performed according to the PRISMA procedure in order to reach all manuscripts considered in the present scoping review. The Embase database showed a total of 25 articles, PubMed displayed 77, the Nursing & Allied Health Database evidenced a total of 74, and the British Nursing database showed 252 records. Then, after a first revision in each database by considering the inclusion criteria, the abovementioned titles and abstracts were selected and, 336 records were removed, and 92 studies remained. Of these, 65 manuscripts were excluded after verifying abstracts. Finally, a total of 7 articles were carefully analysed and selected for this scoping review. Specifically, 2 articles belonged to the British Nursing Database, 3 articles belonged to Embase, 1 to the Nursing & Allied Health Database and one related to PubMed. Oncology nursing should consider several aspects, such as therapy-related toxicity and its related morbidity and mortality, worsening levels of quality of life, and increasing duty by the healthcare organization or endorsements for the principal symptoms and signs which may anticipate few diseases and worst clinical conditions, too. Therefore, careful monitoring may allow prompt recognition and subsequent earlier management in the treatment efficacy.

Sections du résumé

BACKGROUND BACKGROUND
International guidelines recommend a pathway for preferable nursing handling in a specific cancer topic, like chemotherapy toxicity, low adhesion in toxicity reported with a consequential increase in adverse events (AEs) frequency, poorer QoL outcomes, and increased use of healthcare service until death. Unpredictability, postponed reports, and incapability to access healthcare services can compromise toxicity-related effects by including patients' safety. In this scenario, a more attentive nursing intervention can improve patients' outcomes and decrease costs for healthcare services, respectively. The present scoping review aims to describe and synthesize scientific care nursing evidence assessment in oncology patients.
METHODS METHODS
PubMed, Embase, Nursing & Allied Health Database, and British Nursing were the databases examined. Keywords used and associated with Boolean operators were assessment, care, nursing, immune disorder, oncology, and patient. Research articles considered were published between 2013-2023. All systematic processes were performed according to the PRISMA procedure in order to reach all manuscripts considered in the present scoping review.
RESULTS RESULTS
The Embase database showed a total of 25 articles, PubMed displayed 77, the Nursing & Allied Health Database evidenced a total of 74, and the British Nursing database showed 252 records. Then, after a first revision in each database by considering the inclusion criteria, the abovementioned titles and abstracts were selected and, 336 records were removed, and 92 studies remained. Of these, 65 manuscripts were excluded after verifying abstracts. Finally, a total of 7 articles were carefully analysed and selected for this scoping review. Specifically, 2 articles belonged to the British Nursing Database, 3 articles belonged to Embase, 1 to the Nursing & Allied Health Database and one related to PubMed.
CONCLUSION CONCLUSIONS
Oncology nursing should consider several aspects, such as therapy-related toxicity and its related morbidity and mortality, worsening levels of quality of life, and increasing duty by the healthcare organization or endorsements for the principal symptoms and signs which may anticipate few diseases and worst clinical conditions, too. Therefore, careful monitoring may allow prompt recognition and subsequent earlier management in the treatment efficacy.

Identifiants

pubmed: 39092734
pii: EMIDDT-EPUB-142057
doi: 10.2174/0118715303295330240719115132
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Informations de copyright

Copyright© Bentham Science Publishers; For any queries, please email at epub@benthamscience.net.

Auteurs

Elsa Vitale (E)

Scientific Directorate, IRCCS Istituto Tumori "Giovanni Paolo II", Bari, Italy.

Tuğba Bilgehan (T)

Department of İnternal Medicine Nursing, Yüksek İhtisas Üniversitesi, Faculty of Health Sciences, Esenboga, Ankara, Turkey.

Annarita Fanizzi (A)

Laboratorio di Bioinformatica e Biostatistica, IRCCS Istituto Tumori "Giovanni Paolo II", Bari, Italy.

Samantha Bove (S)

Laboratorio di Bioinformatica e Biostatistica, IRCCS Istituto Tumori "Giovanni Paolo II", Bari, Italy.

Maria Colomba Comes (MC)

Laboratorio di Bioinformatica e Biostatistica, IRCCS Istituto Tumori "Giovanni Paolo II", Bari, Italy.

Raffaella Massafra (R)

Laboratorio di Bioinformatica e Biostatistica, IRCCS Istituto Tumori "Giovanni Paolo II", Bari, Italy.

Bahar İnkaya (B)

Department of İnternal Medicine Nursing, Yüksek İhtisas Üniversitesi, Faculty of Health Sciences, Esenboga, Ankara, Turkey.

Classifications MeSH