The impact and implications of virtual supportive cancer care during the COVID-19 pandemic: integrating patient and clinician perspectives

Support Care Cancer. 2022 Dec;30(12):9945-9952. doi: 10.1007/s00520-022-07393-9. Epub 2022 Oct 8.

Abstract

Purpose: Many cancer centers made rapid shifts in supportive care delivery modalities at the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic. Improving virtual supportive cancer care requires deeply understanding both patient's and clinician's experiences. We aimed to integrate the perspectives of clinicians and patients to describe the transition to virtual supportive cancer care during COVID-19.

Methods: In clinical-academic partnership between a multi-site cancer care center in the Northeastern USA and a school of nursing, we conducted a study using dimensional analysis method. Theoretical sampling drove recruitment of patients and clinicians who engaged in virtual supportive cancer care from March 15, 2020 to December 15, 2020. In this sub-analysis, we coded the dimensional analysis data from semi-structured interviews using a descriptive approach with inductive conventional content analysis.

Results: We interviewed 17 clinicians, 18 patients, and 3 care partners about their experiences. We integrate patient and clinician perspectives in four in vivo categories: "When COVID hit," "Not an IT expert," "Those little moments," and "The mothership."

Conclusion: The findings uncover shared patient and clinician fears of missing or sub-optimal care at the onset of COVID-19, technological and relational challenges to engaging in care, and the mixed impacts of virtual care on access, convenience, and efficiency. This analysis suggests concrete action items to improve virtual supportive care for patients and clinicians. The findings corroborate the importance of convenience, access, and efficiency as care quality indicators and suggest potential to emphasize the clinician-patient relationship as an additional indicator of care quality.

Keywords: COVID-19; Cancer; Qualitative; Supportive care; Telehealth.

MeSH terms

  • COVID-19*
  • Humans
  • Neoplasms* / therapy
  • Pandemics
  • Quality of Health Care
  • Research
  • Telemedicine*