A Psychosocial Approach to Understanding Causality Assessment in Early Phase Oncology Clinical Trials: A Phenomenological Study


Autoria(s): Torti, Jacqueline
Contribuinte(s)

Applied Health Sciences Program

Data(s)

09/09/2011

09/09/2011

09/09/2011

Resumo

Research Question: What are the psychosocial factors that affect causality assessment in early phase oncology clinical trials? Methods: Thirty-two qualitative interviews were explicated with the aid of “Naturalistic Decision Making”. Data explication consisted of phenomenological reduction, delineating and clustering meaning units, forming themes, and creating a composite summary. Participants were members of the National Cancer Institute of Canada’s Clinical Trial Group Investigative New Drug committee. Results: The process of assigning causality is extremely subjective and full of uncertainty. Physicians had no formal training, nor a tool to assist them with this process. Physicians were apprehensive about their decisions and felt pressure from their patients, as well as the pharmaceutical companies sponsoring the trial. Conclusions: There are many problem areas when attributing causality, all of which have serious consequences, but clinicians used a variety of methods to cope with these problem areas.

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/10464/3400

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Brock University

Palavras-Chave #Psychosocial #Oncology #Causality #Decision-Making #Phenomenology
Tipo

Electronic Thesis or Dissertation