Author Identifier

Nicolas H. Hart: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2794-0193

Document Type

Journal Article

Publication Title

Journal of Cancer Survivorship

Publisher

Springer

School

Exercise Medicine Research Institute / School of Medical and Health Sciences

Funders

National Health and Medical Research Council

Grant Number

NHMRC Numbers : APP2017080, APP1194051

Comments

McErlean, G., Hui, H., Crawford-Williams, F., Hart, N. H., Krishnasamy, M., Koczwara, B., ... & Jefford, M. (2025). Quality cancer survivorship care: A modified Delphi study to define nurse capabilities. Journal of Cancer Survivorship. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11764-025-01804-6

Abstract

Purpose: To establish capabilities required by nurses to deliver quality cancer survivorship care in Australia. Methods: A two-round online modified Delphi involving Australian cancer nurses. Initial domains and capability statements were based on the Quality of Cancer Survivorship Care Framework and supplemented by national and international nursing frameworks. In Round 1 (R1), experts categorised the applicability of 53 capabilities for cancer nurses, across eight domains, in relation to Australian National Professional Development Framework for Cancer Nursing (EdCaN) groups: ‘All’, ‘Many’, ‘Some’, and ‘Few’ nurses, or not relevant. In Round 2 (R2), experts rated agreement with capabilities allocated to the nurse groups. A priori consensus was set at ≥ 80%. Results: Surveys were distributed to 51 experts, with a response rate of 92% (47/51) for R1 and 75% (38/51) for R2. Following R1, ten capabilities were added, resulting in 63 capabilities for R2 to establish consensus allocation to EdCaN groupings. Fifty-seven capabilities reached consensus; four capabilities were moved from ‘many’ to ‘some’ nurses; one capability was moved from ‘some’ to ‘few’ nurses; and one capability was retained in ‘all’ nurses following Delphi feedback and research team discussion. Conclusions: Sixty-three capabilities across eight cancer survivorship care domains were identified and allocated to different nursing groupings. This study provides important foundational work by identifying the capabilities of cancer nurses to deliver quality cancer survivorship care in Australia. Implications for Cancer Survivors: The identification of clearly defined capabilities may improve the quality of cancer survivorship care through the enrichment and standardisation of educational curricula and continuing professional education, and through improved workforce planning.

DOI

10.1007/s11764-025-01804-6

Creative Commons License

Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Included in

Oncology Commons

Share

 
COinS