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. 2024 Jun 7;116(6):800-811.
doi: 10.1093/jnci/djae048.

Health-care organization characteristics in cancer care delivery: an integrated conceptual framework with content validation

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Health-care organization characteristics in cancer care delivery: an integrated conceptual framework with content validation

Sallie J Weaver et al. J Natl Cancer Inst. .

Abstract

Context can influence cancer-related outcomes. For example, health-care organization characteristics, including ownership, leadership, and culture, can affect care access, communication, and patient outcomes. Health-care organization characteristics and other contextual factors can also influence whether and how clinical discoveries reduce cancer incidence, morbidity, and mortality. Importantly, policy, market, and technology changes are transforming health-care organization design, culture, and operations across the cancer continuum. Consequently, research is essential to examine when, for whom, and how organizational characteristics influence person-level, organization-level, and population-level cancer outcomes. Understanding organizational characteristics-the structures, processes, and other features of entities involved in health care delivery-and their dynamics is an important yet understudied area of care delivery research across the cancer continuum. Research incorporating organizational characteristics is critical to address health inequities, test care delivery models, adapt interventions, and strengthen implementation. The field lacks conceptual grounding, however, to help researchers identify germane organizational characteristics. We propose a framework identifying organizational characteristics relevant for cancer care delivery research based on conceptual work in health services, organizational behavior, and management science and refined using a systematic review and key informant input. The proposed framework is a tool for organizing existing research and enhancing future cancer care delivery research. Following a 2012 Journal of the National Cancer Institute monograph, this work complements National Cancer Institute efforts to stimulate research addressing the relationship between cancer outcomes and contextual factors at the patient, provider, team, delivery organization, community, and health policy levels.

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Conflict of interest statement

S.W., E.S.B., L.E.R., A.Z., R.S., E.B., and J.M. report no conflict of interest. C.S. has current or recent funding from Pfizer and Genentech through the Johns Hopkins University and consulting fees from Shionogi and Janssen—all unrelated to the subject.

Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.
The Characteristics of Healthcare Organizations to inform Research in cancer care Delivery (CHORD) integrated framework

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