Measuring the quality of skin cancer management in primary care: A scoping review

Author:

Spanos Samantha1ORCID,Singh Nehal1,Laginha Bela I.1,Arnolda Gaston1,Wilkinson David12,Smith Andrea L.3,Cust Anne E.34,Braithwaite Jeffrey1,Rapport Frances1

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Healthcare Resilience and Implementation Science, Australian Institute of Health Innovation, Faculty of Medicine, Health and Human Sciences Macquarie University Sydney New South Wales Australia

2. National Skin Cancer Centres South Brisbane Queensland Australia

3. The Daffodil Centre University of Sydney, a joint venture with Cancer Council NSW Sydney New South Wales Australia

4. Melanoma Institute Australia The University of Sydney Sydney New South Wales Australia

Abstract

AbstractSkin cancer is a growing global problem and a significant health and economic burden. Despite the practical necessity for skin cancer to be managed in primary care settings, little is known about how quality of care is or should be measured in this setting. This scoping review aimed to capture the breadth and range of contemporary evidence related to the measurement of quality in skin cancer management in primary care settings. Six databases were searched for relevant texts reporting on quality measurement in primary care skin cancer management. Data from 46 texts published since 2011 were extracted, and quality measures were catalogued according to the three domains of the Donabedian model of healthcare quality (structure, process and outcome). Quality measures within each domain were inductively analysed into 13 key emergent groups. These represented what were deemed to be the most relevant components of skin cancer management as related to structure, process or outcomes measurement. Four groups related to the structural elements of care provision (e.g. diagnostic tools and equipment), five related to the process of care delivery (e.g. diagnostic processes) and four related to the outcomes of care (e.g. poor treatment outcomes). A broad range of quality measures have been documented, based predominantly on articles using retrospective cohort designs; systematic reviews and randomised controlled trials were limited.

Funder

National Health and Medical Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Dermatology

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