Frontiers in Oncology (Jul 2021)

The Exercise Oncology Knowledge Mobilization Initiative: An International Modified Delphi Study

  • Scott C. Adams,
  • Scott C. Adams,
  • Scott C. Adams,
  • Jenna Smith-Turchyn,
  • Daniel Santa Mina,
  • Daniel Santa Mina,
  • Daniel Santa Mina,
  • Sarah Neil-Sztramko,
  • Prue Cormie,
  • Prue Cormie,
  • S. Nicole Culos-Reed,
  • S. Nicole Culos-Reed,
  • Kristin L. Campbell,
  • Gemma Pugh,
  • David Langelier,
  • David Langelier,
  • David Langelier,
  • Kathryn H. Schmitz,
  • David J. Phipps,
  • Michelle Nadler,
  • Michelle Nadler,
  • Catherine M. Sabiston

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2021.713199
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11

Abstract

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IntroductionExercise is vital to health and well-being after a cancer diagnosis yet is poorly integrated in cancer care. Knowledge mobilization (KM) is essential to enhance exercise opportunities. We aimed to (1) develop and refine a list of highly important exercise oncology research and KM themes and (2) establish the relative importance of the themes for supporting the implementation of exercise as a standard of care for people living with and beyond cancer.MethodsInformed by the Co-Produced Pathway to Impact KM framework, a modified Delphi study approach was used to develop, rate, and rank exercise oncology research and KM themes through an international stakeholder workshop and a three-round iterative online survey. Open-ended stakeholder feedback from cancer survivors, healthcare practitioners (HCPs), qualified exercise professionals (QEPs), policy makers, and researchers was used to update themes between survey rounds. Themes were ranked from highest to lowest importance and agreement was examined across all stakeholders and within stakeholder groups.ResultsA total of 269 exercise oncology stakeholders from 13 countries participated in the study. Twelve final exercise oncology research and KM themes were produced. The final top ranked research themes were related to: (1) QEP integration into primary cancer care teams, (2) Exercise oncology education for HCPs, and (3) Accessibility of cancer exercise programs & support services. There was statistically significant agreement between stakeholders (p<0.001) and within stakeholder groups (p’s≤0.02) on the general rankings of themes (i.e., some themes generally ranked higher and lower compared to others). Low Kendall’s W statistics indicated variability related to the specific ranked order of the themes between stakeholders and within stakeholder groups. Moreover, there were key differences in the rankings for specific themes between policy makers and other stakeholder groups that highlight potentially important discordance in the research and KM priorities for policy makers that warrants further study.ConclusionThese findings can be used to guide initiatives and align stakeholders on priorities to support exercise implementation as a standard of cancer care. Additional research is needed to better understand the differences in the proposed research and KM priorities across stakeholders.

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