Establishment of a research policy for supportive and palliative care in Japan

Article indépendant

ZENDA, Sadamoto | UCHITOMI, Yosuke | MORITA, Tatsuya | YAMAGUCHI, Takuhiro | INOUE, Akira

BACKGROUND: While several small groups in Japan have attempted to conduct prospective studies in the field of supportive and palliative care, development of exploratory research into multicentre confirmatory studies has been difficult. The main reason for this is the difference in clinical research methodology in supportive and palliative care compared with medical oncology in terms of the style of multidisciplinary approaches, study design and endpoints. Here, we establish a new research policy for cancer supportive and palliative care in Japan. METHODS: The first draft was developed by a policy working group within the Japanese Supportive, Palliative and Psychosocial Care Study Group. A provisional draft was subsequently developed after review by nine Japanese scientific societies (Japanese Association of Supportive Care in Cancer, Japanese Society of Medical Oncology, Japanese Society of Clinical Oncology, Japanese Society of Palliative Medicine, Japanese Society of Cancer Nursing, Japanese Society of Pharmaceutical Oncology (JASPO), Japan Cancer Association (JCA), Japanese Society of Therapeutic Radiation Oncology and Japanese Cancer Association) and receipt of public comments. The final research policy in the area of supportive and palliative care in Japan (Ver1.0) was completed in December 2018 and underwent its first revision (Ver1.1) in February, 2020. RESULTS: The policy includes the following components of clinical research: (i) objective of the research policy in the areas of supportive and palliative care; (ii) definitions of supportive care and palliative care; (iii) characteristics of supportive and palliative care research; (iv) target population for research; (v) research design; (vi) endpoints and assessment measures; (vii) handling of the deaths of subjects and (viii) operational structure and quality management. CONCLUSIONS: We hope that studies conducted according to this policy will play important roles in the future development of the supportive and palliative field.

https://academic.oup.com/jjco/article/51/4/538/6131954

Voir la revue «Japanese journal of clinical oncology, 51»

Autres numéros de la revue «Japanese journal of clinical oncology»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Establishment of a research policy for suppor...

Article | ZENDA, Sadamoto | Japanese journal of clinical oncology | n°4 | vol.51

BACKGROUND: While several small groups in Japan have attempted to conduct prospective studies in the field of supportive and palliative care, development of exploratory research into multicentre confirmatory studies has been diffi...

Establishment of a research policy for suppor...

Article indépendant | ZENDA, Sadamoto | Japanese journal of clinical oncology | n°4 | vol.51

BACKGROUND: While several small groups in Japan have attempted to conduct prospective studies in the field of supportive and palliative care, development of exploratory research into multicentre confirmatory studies has been diffi...

Fan therapy is effective in relieving dyspnea...

Article indépendant | KAKO, Jun | JOURNAL OF PAIN AND SYMPTOM MANAGEMENT | n°4 | vol.56

CONTEXT: Dyspnea is a common distressing symptom among patients with advanced cancer. OBJECTIVE: The objective of this study was to determine the effect of fan therapy on dyspnea in patients with terminally ill cancer. METHODS: Th...

De la même série

Early specialized palliative care for patient...

Article indépendant | MATSUMOTO, Yoshihisa | Japanese journal of clinical oncology | n°4 | vol.52

BACKGROUND: Strategies to implement early specialized palliative care have not yet been established. The present study investigated the feasibility of a nurse-led, screening-triggered early specialized palliative care intervention...

The impact of death rattle on bereaved famili...

Article indépendant | YAMAGUCHI, Takashi | Japanese journal of clinical oncology | n°7 | vol.52

Background: This study aimed to explore (i) the consistency between physician-rated and bereaved family-perceived intensity of death rattle, (ii) the relationship between intensity of death rattle and the bereaved family's distres...

Establishment of a research policy for suppor...

Article indépendant | ZENDA, Sadamoto | Japanese journal of clinical oncology | n°4 | vol.51

BACKGROUND: While several small groups in Japan have attempted to conduct prospective studies in the field of supportive and palliative care, development of exploratory research into multicentre confirmatory studies has been diffi...

Advance care planning in Asian culture

Article indépendant | CHENG, Shao-Yi | Japanese journal of clinical oncology | n°9 | vol.50

Ageing has been recognized as one of the most critically important health-care issues worldwide. It is relevant to Asia, where the increasing number of older populations has drawn attention to the paramount need for health-care in...

Aggressiveness of cancer-care near the end-of...

Article indépendant | KEAM, Bhumsuk | Japanese journal of clinical oncology | n°5 | vol.38

Le but de cette étude était d'examiner la pertinence de la chimiothérapie et les soins chez des patients cancéreux coréens en fin de vie. Elle a été conçue à partir d'une cohorte rétrospective composée de patients diagnostiqués av...

Chargement des enrichissements...