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Palliative Care and Oncology Survey on Terminology
Sponsor: Our Lady's Hospice and Care Services
Summary
The term '"cancer survivors" is widely used but has different definitions. One definition describes "cancer survivors" as individuals from the time of diagnosis throughout their lives, which includes people living with cancer and people free of cancer. The views of some groups included in this definition of "cancer survivors" have rarely been assessed, including those with cancer on anticancer treatment and those known to palliative care. How they view these terms could have important implications for how they receive care services. This is an international multi-centre observational study. It aims to recruit patients internationally across Ireland and the United Kingdom. Participants known to cancer and/or palliative care hospital or hospice services as inpatients, outpatients or community patients will be asked to complete a survey during a one-off visit which should last under 30 minutes. The survey asks a series of questions to determine the perceptions of patients know to cancer and palliative care services about the terminologies used to describe them.
Official title: What do Individuals Known to Palliative Care and Oncology Services Think About the Terminology Used to Describe Them?
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - Any
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
1532
Start Date
2023-10-03
Completion Date
2025-10
Last Updated
2025-06-27
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Palliative Care and Oncology Survey on Terminology (POST)
Each group receives a survey to complete. The only difference between the two is the inclusion criteria; the surveys are the same.
Locations (3)
St Vincent's University Hospital
Dublin, County Dublin, Ireland
Our Lady's Hospice & Care Services
Dublin, Ireland
Royal Surrey County Hospital
Guildford, Surrey, United Kingdom