TY - JOUR
T1 - Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Cancer Researchers in 2020
T2 - A Qualitative Study of Events to Inform Mitigation Strategies
AU - Fox, Louis
AU - Beyer, Katharina
AU - Rammant, Elke
AU - Morcom, Esme
AU - Hemelrijck, Mieke Van
AU - Sullivan, Richard
AU - Vanderpuye, Verna
AU - Lombe, Dorothy
AU - Tsunoda, Audrey Tieko
AU - Kutluk, Tezer
AU - Bhoo-Pathy, Nirmala
AU - Pramesh, Shanmugham C.
AU - Yusuf, Aasim
AU - Booth, Christopher M.
AU - Shamieh, Omar
AU - Siesling, Sabine
AU - Mukherji, Deborah
PY - 2021/11/24
Y1 - 2021/11/24
N2 - Introduction: The COVID-19 pandemic has
had an unprecedented impact on global health systems and economies.
With ongoing and future challenges posed to the field due to the
pandemic, re-examining research priorities has emerged as a concern. As
part of a wider project aiming to examine research priorities, here we
aimed to qualitatively examine the documented impacts of the COVID-19
pandemic on cancer researchers.
Materials and Methods: We conducted a
literature review with the aim of identifying non-peer-reviewed
journalistic sources and institutional blog posts which qualitatively
documented the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on cancer researchers.
We searched on 12th January 2021 using the LexisNexis database and
Google, using terms and filters to identify English-language media
reports and blogs, containing references to both COVID-19 and cancer
research. The targeted search returned 751 results, of which 215
articles met the inclusion criteria. These 215 articles were subjected
to a conventional qualitative content analysis, to document the impacts
of the pandemic on the field of cancer research.
Results: Our analysis yielded a high
plurality of qualitatively documented impacts, from which seven
categories of direct impacts emerged: (1) COVID measures halting cancer
research activity entirely; (2) COVID measures limiting cancer research
activity; (3) forced adaptation of research protocols; (4) impacts on
cancer diagnosis, cases, and services; (5) availability of resources for
cancer research; (6) disruption to the private sector; and (7)
disruption to supply chains. Three categories of consequences from these
impacts also emerged: (1) potential changes to future research
practice; (2) delays to the progression of the field; and (3) potential
new areas of research interest.
Discussion: The COVID-19 pandemic had
extensive practical and economic effects on the field of cancer research
in 2020 that were highly plural in nature. Appraisal of cancer research
strategies in a post-COVID world should acknowledge the potential for
substantial limitations (such as on financial resources, limited access
to patients for research, decreased patient access to cancer care,
staffing issues, administrative delays, or supply chain issues),
exacerbated cancer disparities, advances in digital health, and new
areas of research related to the intersection of cancer and COVID-19.
AB - Introduction: The COVID-19 pandemic has
had an unprecedented impact on global health systems and economies.
With ongoing and future challenges posed to the field due to the
pandemic, re-examining research priorities has emerged as a concern. As
part of a wider project aiming to examine research priorities, here we
aimed to qualitatively examine the documented impacts of the COVID-19
pandemic on cancer researchers.
Materials and Methods: We conducted a
literature review with the aim of identifying non-peer-reviewed
journalistic sources and institutional blog posts which qualitatively
documented the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on cancer researchers.
We searched on 12th January 2021 using the LexisNexis database and
Google, using terms and filters to identify English-language media
reports and blogs, containing references to both COVID-19 and cancer
research. The targeted search returned 751 results, of which 215
articles met the inclusion criteria. These 215 articles were subjected
to a conventional qualitative content analysis, to document the impacts
of the pandemic on the field of cancer research.
Results: Our analysis yielded a high
plurality of qualitatively documented impacts, from which seven
categories of direct impacts emerged: (1) COVID measures halting cancer
research activity entirely; (2) COVID measures limiting cancer research
activity; (3) forced adaptation of research protocols; (4) impacts on
cancer diagnosis, cases, and services; (5) availability of resources for
cancer research; (6) disruption to the private sector; and (7)
disruption to supply chains. Three categories of consequences from these
impacts also emerged: (1) potential changes to future research
practice; (2) delays to the progression of the field; and (3) potential
new areas of research interest.
Discussion: The COVID-19 pandemic had
extensive practical and economic effects on the field of cancer research
in 2020 that were highly plural in nature. Appraisal of cancer research
strategies in a post-COVID world should acknowledge the potential for
substantial limitations (such as on financial resources, limited access
to patients for research, decreased patient access to cancer care,
staffing issues, administrative delays, or supply chain issues),
exacerbated cancer disparities, advances in digital health, and new
areas of research related to the intersection of cancer and COVID-19.
KW - cancer
KW - Covid-19
KW - impact
KW - funding
KW - mitigation
KW - epidemic
KW - pandemic
KW - oncology
U2 - 10.3389/fpubh.2021.741223
DO - 10.3389/fpubh.2021.741223
M3 - Article
SN - 2296-2565
VL - 9
JO - Frontiers in Public Health
JF - Frontiers in Public Health
M1 - 741223
ER -