Litcius/Paper detail

Interventions addressing health-related social needs among patients with cancer

Evan M. Graboyes, Simon J. Craddock Lee, Stacy Tessler Lindau, Alyce S. Adams, Brenda A. Adjei, Mary Lou Brown, Gelareh Sadigh, Andrea Incudine, Ruth C. Carlos, Scott D. Ramsey, Rick Bangs

2024JNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Health-related social needs are prevalent among cancer patients; associated with substantial negative health consequences; and drive pervasive inequities in cancer incidence, severity, treatment choices and decisions, and outcomes. To address the lack of clinical trial evidence to guide health-related social needs interventions among cancer patients, the National Cancer Institute Cancer Care Delivery Research Steering Committee convened experts to participate in a clinical trials planning meeting with the goal of designing studies to screen for and address health-related social needs among cancer patients. In this commentary, we discuss the rationale for, and challenges of, designing and testing health-related social needs interventions in alignment with the National Academy of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine 5As framework. Evidence for food, housing, utilities, interpersonal safety, and transportation health-related social needs interventions is analyzed. Evidence regarding health-related social needs and delivery of health-related social needs interventions differs in maturity and applicability to cancer context, with transportation problems having the most maturity and interpersonal safety the least. We offer practical recommendations for health-related social needs interventions among cancer patients and the caregivers, families, and friends who support their health-related social needs. Cross-cutting (ie, health-related social needs agnostic) recommendations include leveraging navigation (eg, people, technology) to identify, refer, and deliver health-related social needs interventions; addressing health-related social needs through multilevel interventions; and recognizing that health-related social needs are states, not traits, that fluctuate over time. Health-related social needs-specific interventions are recommended, and pros and cons of addressing more than one health-related social needs concurrently are characterized. Considerations for collaborating with community partners are highlighted. The need for careful planning, strong partners, and funding is stressed. Finally, we outline a future research agenda to address evidence gaps.

Topics & Concepts

Psychological interventionHealth careSocial determinants of healthNeeds assessmentSocial supportMedicinePsychologyPublic healthGerontologyNursingSocial psychologyPolitical scienceLawFood Security and Health in Diverse PopulationsPalliative Care and End-of-Life IssuesChildhood Cancer Survivors' Quality of Life