Bridging the Gap: Embedding Psychosocial Oncology Research into Comprehensive Cancer Care for Children and Young People
Simple Summary
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Comprehensive Cancer Care—Tailored to Child and Family Needs
3. Truly Integrating Supportive Care
4. Bridging the Gap Between Psychosocial Oncology Research and Comprehensive Cancer Care
5. Comprehensive Cancer Care for All Young Australians
6. A New Paradigm? Researchers as Translators
7. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Translation Gap/Challenge | Opportunity |
---|---|
Evidence-based models of psychosocial care are identified as research priorities for young people/families, yet in practice, psychosocial care is often under-resourced and often reactive in nature. | Psychosocial research methods and principles should be integrated alongside clinical pediatric cancer research, including using lived experience and co-design methods to ensure psychosocial concerns are addressed in how medical care and clinical trials are explained and delivered. |
Scientist–practitioner models that integrate research and practice are limited in psychosocial oncology due to a lack of funding for dual clinician–researcher positions and a lack of career pathways in the health system. | Competitive research funding schemes should include dedicated and specific opportunities for clinician–researchers. Likewise, a greater number of clinician–researcher positions—including for non-medical disciplines such as psychosocial/allied health and nursing disciplines—are needed to embed research translation into the health system. |
Psychosocial interventions are often tested in isolation, unintegrated with the clinical care systems in which they are hoped to be integrated. | Research should focus on testing complex interventions, including more explicitly testing referral and access pathways driven by patient and family preferences. |
Individual clinical champions at individual institutions can become overburdened or may not have the capacity to consistently support psychosocial oncology research. | Partnerships with the broader health system and community, including non-profit organizations, can expand the reach of psychosocial oncology research and increase access to evidence-based interventions. Future research should examine how digital technologies and artificial intelligence can be used to enhance how families can access high-quality support and information to supplement their clinical care. |
The vast majority of psychosocial oncology research is conducted in high-income, English-speaking, Westernized countries, limiting the relevance and cultural appropriateness of psychosocial models/interventions. There has been little research examining how social determinants of health intersect to promote or threaten psychosocial outcomes. | Psychosocial oncology researchers should prioritize building partnerships with community groups to increase the reach and impact of their work. Researchers (and the funding schemes that fund their work) should also incorporate strategies to address current disparities in research participation/lived experience involvement, such as approaches that support the financial remuneration of consumers/participants. |
The voices of young people and their families have traditionally been left out of the research development and translation pipeline. | Ensuring that research priority-setting is part of the research pipeline is critical to ensuring studies focus on what matters most to people with the lived experience of cancer. Furthermore, upskilling and reimbursing people with lived experience to contribute their expertise is a necessary step. Partnering with people with lived experience as co-experts and co-investigators from the study idea-generating phase through to implementation/dissemination is critical to ensuring their priorities remain central to the entire research translation pipeline. |
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Share and Cite
Sansom-Daly, U.M.; McLoone, J.K.; Fardell, J.E.; Evans, H.E.; McGill, B.C.; Robertson, E.G.; Signorelli, C.; Ellis, S.; Ha, L.; Hetherington, K.; et al. Bridging the Gap: Embedding Psychosocial Oncology Research into Comprehensive Cancer Care for Children and Young People. Cancers 2025, 17, 2123. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers17132123
Sansom-Daly UM, McLoone JK, Fardell JE, Evans HE, McGill BC, Robertson EG, Signorelli C, Ellis S, Ha L, Hetherington K, et al. Bridging the Gap: Embedding Psychosocial Oncology Research into Comprehensive Cancer Care for Children and Young People. Cancers. 2025; 17(13):2123. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers17132123
Chicago/Turabian StyleSansom-Daly, Ursula Margaret, Jordana Kathleen McLoone, Joanna Elizabeth Fardell, Holly Elaine Evans, Brittany Claire McGill, Eden Grace Robertson, Christina Signorelli, Sarah Ellis, Lauren Ha, Kate Hetherington, and et al. 2025. "Bridging the Gap: Embedding Psychosocial Oncology Research into Comprehensive Cancer Care for Children and Young People" Cancers 17, no. 13: 2123. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers17132123
APA StyleSansom-Daly, U. M., McLoone, J. K., Fardell, J. E., Evans, H. E., McGill, B. C., Robertson, E. G., Signorelli, C., Ellis, S., Ha, L., Hetherington, K., Houweling, R. E., Nevin, S. M., Schilstra, C. E., Mitchell, R., Haber, M., Cohn, R. J., & Wakefield, C. E. (2025). Bridging the Gap: Embedding Psychosocial Oncology Research into Comprehensive Cancer Care for Children and Young People. Cancers, 17(13), 2123. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers17132123