Communicating with families of young people with hard-to-treat cancers:
Healthcare professionals’ perspectives on challenges, skills, and
training
Abstract
Background: Hard-to-treat childhood cancers are those where
standard treatment options do not exist and prognosis is poor.
Healthcare professionals (HCPs) are responsible for communicating with
families about prognosis and complex experimental treatment. We aimed to
identify HCPs’ key challenges and skills required when communicating
with families about hard-to-treat cancers, and their perceptions of
communication-related training. Method: We interviewed
Australian HCPs who had direct responsibilities in managing
children/adolescents with a hard-to-treat cancer within the past 24
months. Interviews were analysed using qualitative content analysis.
Results: We interviewed 10 oncologists, 7 nurses, and 3 social
workers. HCPs identified several challenges for communication with
families including: balancing information provision while maintaining
realistic hope; managing their own uncertainty; and nurses and social
workers being under-utilised during conversations with families, despite
widespread preferences for multidisciplinary teamwork. HCPs perceived
that making themselves available to families, empowering them to ask
questions, and repeating information helped to establish and maintain
trusting relationships with families. Half the HCPs reported receiving
no formal training for communicating prognosis and treatment options
with families of children with hard-to-treat cancers. Nurses, social
workers, and junior oncologists supported the development of
communication training resources, more so than senior oncologists.
Conclusion(s): Resources are needed which support HCPs to
communicate with families of children with hard-to-treat cancers. Such
resources may be particularly beneficial for junior oncologists and
other HCPs during their training, and should aim to prepare them for
common challenges, and to foster greater multidisciplinary
collaboration.