Palliative Care and Social Practice (Oct 2024)

Adapting, implementing and evaluating a navigation intervention for older people with cancer and their family caregivers in six countries in Europe: the Horizon Europe-funded EU NAVIGATE project

  • Rose Miranda,
  • Tinne Smets,
  • Lara Pivodic,
  • Kenneth Chambaere,
  • Barbara Pesut,
  • Wendy Duggleby,
  • Bregje D. Onwuteaka-Philipsen,
  • Barbara Gomes,
  • Peter May,
  • Katarzyna Szczerbińska,
  • Andrew N. Davies,
  • Davide Ferraris,
  • H. Roeline Pasman,
  • Maja Furlan de Brito,
  • Ilona Barańska,
  • Laura Gangeri,
  • Lieve Van den Block

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/26323524241288873
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18

Abstract

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Background: Navigation interventions could support, educate and empower older people with cancer and/or their family caregivers by addressing barriers and ensuring timely access to needed services and resources throughout the continuum of supportive, palliative and end-of-life care. Objectives: European Union (EU) NAVIGATE is an interdisciplinary and cross-country Horizon Europe-funded project (2022–2027) aiming to evaluate the effectiveness, cost-effectiveness and implementation of a navigation intervention for older people with cancer and their family caregivers in Europe. EU NAVIGATE aims to advance the evidence on cancer patient navigation in Europe. Design: Adaptation, implementation and evaluation of a navigation intervention with an international pragmatic randomized controlled trial (RCT) and embedded mixed-method process evaluation at its core. A logic model guides dissemination and impact-generating strategies. EU NAVIGATE involves six experienced EU academic partners; one EU national cancer league with their affiliated academic partner; three EU dissemination partners; and a Canadian partner. Methods: We adapted the Canadian Navigation: Connecting, Advocating, Resourcing, and Engaging (Nav-CARE © ) volunteer programme to healthcare contexts in Belgium, Ireland, Italy, the Netherlands, Poland and Portugal following the new ADAPT guidance. Nav-CARE was developed over the past 15 years and supports people with declining health and their families to improve their quality of life and well-being, foster empowerment and facilitate timely and equitable access to healthcare and social services. In EU NAVIGATE, the navigation intervention is being provided by trained and mentored social workers in Poland and by trained and mentored volunteers in the other five countries. Via a pragmatic RCT with process evaluation, we implement and evaluate the navigation intervention to study its impact on older people with cancer and their family caregivers. We also aim to understand its cost-effectiveness, how to optimally implement it in different countries, and its differential effects in patient subgroups. We will also map existing cancer navigation interventions in Europe, the United States and Canada to position EU NAVIGATE within the field of navigation interventions worldwide. Conclusion: EU NAVIGATE aims to deliver high-quality evidence on a navigation intervention for older people with cancer in Europe and to develop practice and policy recommendations for sustainable implementation of navigation interventions in Europe and beyond.