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Professional qualification and childhood cancer in primary care

Abstract

Objective

To analyze the perception of professionals working in Primary Care about their professional training related to childhood cancer.

Methods

This is an exploratory study, with a qualitative approach, developed with professionals in Primary Care in the city of Campinas-SP. The study was conducted through focus groups, guided by semi-structured questions. Thematic modality of Content Analysis was adopted.

Results

Two categories were identified: “Experiences and professional training in the face of childhood cancer in Primary Care”, resulting in little contact with the theme, both through experiences and through professional training; and “Comprehensiveness of care for children and adolescents with cancer in Primary Care and professional qualification”, with little or no preparation being unveiled to ensure comprehensive care, with issues different from the biological aspects of the disease.

Conclusion

From professionals’ perceptions, there was little contact and insufficient preparation to list assertive actions related to childhood cancer in Primary Care, pointing out the need for future changes in the inclusion of the theme in this level of care and improvements in the quality of continuing education in the services.

Professional training; Primary health care; Neoplasms; Child health; Adolescent health

Resumo

Objetivo

Analisar a percepção de profissionais que atuam na Atenção Básica sobre sua formação profissional relacionada ao câncer infantojuvenil.

Métodos

Trata-se de um estudo exploratório, com abordagem qualitativa, desenvolvido junto aos profissionais da Atenção Básica do município de Campinas-SP. A condução do estudo foi realizada por meio de grupos focais, orientados por questões semiestruturadas. Adotou-se a modalidade temática da Análise de Conteúdo.

Resultados

Foram identificadas duas categorias: “Experiências e formação profissional frente ao câncer infantojuvenil na Atenção Básica”, traduzindo-se em pouco contato com a temática, tanto por experiências, quanto por meio da formação profissional; e, a “Integralidade do cuidado à criança e ao adolescente com câncer na Atenção Básica e a qualificação profissional”, sendo desvelado pouco ou o nenhum preparo para garantir a integralidade do cuidado, com questões distintas dos aspectos biológicos da doença.

Conclusão

A partir das percepções dos profissionais, notou-se pouco contato e preparo insuficiente para elencar ações assertivas relacionadas ao câncer infantojuvenil na Atenção Básica, apontando necessidades de mudanças futuras na inclusão do tema neste nível de atenção e melhorias na qualidade da educação permanente nos serviços.

Capacitação profissional; Atenção primária à saúde; Neoplasias; Saúde da criança; Saúde do adolescente

Resumen

Objetivo

Analizar la percepción de profesionales que actúan en la Atención Básica sobre su formación profesional relacionada con el cáncer infantojuvenil.

Métodos

Se trata de un estudio exploratorio, con enfoque cualitativo, llevado a cabo con profesionales de la Atención Básica del municipio de Campinas, estado de São Paulo. El estudio fue conducido por medio de grupos focales, guiados con preguntas semiestructuradas. Se adoptó la modalidad temática del análisis de contenido.

Resultados

Se identificaron dos categorías: “Experiencias y formación profesional frente al cáncer infantojuvenil en la Atención Básica”, que se tradujo en poco contacto con la temática, tanto por experiencias, como mediante la formación profesional, e “Integralidad del cuidado de niños y adolescentes con cáncer en la Atención Básica y la cualificación profesional”, que reveló poco o ningún tipo de preparación para garantizar la integralidad del cuidado, con cuestiones distintas a los aspectos biológicos de la enfermedad.

Conclusión

A partir de las percepciones de los profesionales, se observó poco contacto y preparación insuficiente para enumerar acciones asertivas relacionadas con el cáncer infantojuvenil en la Atención Básica, lo que indica la necesidad de cambios futuros respecto a la inclusión del tema en este nivel de atención y mejoras en la calidad de la educación permanente en los servicios.

Capacitación professional; Atención primaria de salud; Neoplasias; Salud del niño; Salud del adolescente

Introduction

Professional training, as well as continuing education promotion for qualification of care, are references and goals of movements that aim to implement strategies that strengthen the promotion of effective care at different levels of healthcare.(11. Brasil. Ministério da Saúde. Portaria GM/MS No 1.996 de 20 de agosto de 2007. Dispõe sobre as diretrizes para a implementação da Política Nacional de Educação Permanente em Saúde. Brasília (DF): Ministério da Saúde; 2007 [citado 2020 Dez 20]. Disponível em: http://bvsms.saude.gov.br/bvs/saudelegis/gm/2007/prt1996_20_08_2007.html
http://bvsms.saude.gov.br/bvs/saudelegis...
,22. Brasil. Ministério da Saúde. Portaria no 874, de 16 de maio de 2013. Dispõe sobre a Política Nacional para a Prevenção e Controle do Câncer na Rede de Atenção à Saúde das Pessoas com Doenças Crônicas no âmbito do Sistema Único de Saúde. Brasília (DF): Ministério da Saúde; 2013 [citado 2020 Dez 30]. Disponível em: http://bvsms.saude.gov.br/bvs/saudelegis/gm/2013/prt0874_16_05_2013.html
http://bvsms.saude.gov.br/bvs/saudelegis...
)

One of the possible ways to carry out the organization of services is the inclusion of proposals for articulated work, highlighting training for the health area, based on the junction between individual and institutional development, the role of services and sectoral management, and between healthcare and social control.(33. Freire Filho JR, Silva CB, Costa MV, Forster AC. Educação Interprofissional nas políticas de reorientação da formação profissional em saúde no Brasil. Saúde Debate. 2019;43(Spe 1):86-96.)

In order to ensure comprehensive care, an interprofessional training is sought, aligned with the health needs of people and populations, being capable of impacting and influencing the formulation of policies to reorient training in health.(33. Freire Filho JR, Silva CB, Costa MV, Forster AC. Educação Interprofissional nas políticas de reorientação da formação profissional em saúde no Brasil. Saúde Debate. 2019;43(Spe 1):86-96.)

Likewise, it is necessary that the structuring, organization, and execution of actions and services of the Brazilian Unified Health System (SUS - Sistema Único de Saúde) are ordered by Primary Care in all dimensions, constituting the main gateway to the system and the foundation of healthcare.(44. Santos L. Healthcare regions and their care networks: an organizational-systemic model for SUS. Cien Saude Colet. 2017;22(4):1281-9.)

It is essential that Primary Care has actions aimed at expanding access to other levels of complexity in SUS.(55. Bousquat A, Giovanella L, Campos EM, Almeida PF, Martins CL, Mota PH, et al. Primary health care and the coordination of care in health regions: managers’ and users’ perspective. Cien Saude Colet. 2017;22(4):1141–54.) It is also necessary to establish adequate training, producing knowledge of the peculiarities and needs of the population, and taking into account the complexity of health-disease processes in different life cycles, and their dialogue with the territory issues.(66. Sant’Anna CF, Cezar-Vaz MR, Cardoso LS, Bonow CA, Silva MR. Community: collective objective of nurses’ work within the Family Health Strategy. Acta Paul Enferm. 2011;24(3):341-7.)

In this regard, in 2013, the Brazilian National Policy for Prevention and Control of Cancer in the Healthcare Network for People with Chronic Diseases (Política Nacional para a Prevenção e Controle do Câncer na Rede de Atenção à Saúde das Pessoas com Doenças Crônicas)(22. Brasil. Ministério da Saúde. Portaria no 874, de 16 de maio de 2013. Dispõe sobre a Política Nacional para a Prevenção e Controle do Câncer na Rede de Atenção à Saúde das Pessoas com Doenças Crônicas no âmbito do Sistema Único de Saúde. Brasília (DF): Ministério da Saúde; 2013 [citado 2020 Dez 30]. Disponível em: http://bvsms.saude.gov.br/bvs/saudelegis/gm/2013/prt0874_16_05_2013.html
http://bvsms.saude.gov.br/bvs/saudelegis...
)was instituted, which describes the implementation of early diagnosis and identification actions signs and symptoms of cancers subject to this action as one of the competencies of Primary Care.

With this, the health team that works at this level of care becomes responsible for conducting actions to prevent and control cancer, as well as to ensure comprehensive care. Therefore, many specific activities have already been developed in Primary Care in relation to cancer prevention and control, notably when it comes to women’s and men’s health, with an expressive focus on the prevention and control of cervical cancer and breast and prostate cancer, even pointed out by the annual action agenda, represented by pink October and blue November.(77. Gutiérrez MG, Almeida AM. Pink October [Editorial]. Acta Paul Enferm. 2017;30(5):3-5.,88. Modesto AA, Lima RL, D’Angelis AC, Augusto DK. Um novembro não tão azul: debatendo rastreamento de câncer de próstata e saúde do homem. Interface. 2018;22(64):251-62.)

However, when it comes to actions aimed at cancer in the child-juvenile population, there are few initiatives to support the work of Primary Care professionals, being considered thematic and care specific to oncological specialties, often focused only on clinical aspects, disregarding the importance in also include professionals who do not perform the diagnosis.(99. Lima IM. Câncer infantojuvenil: ações de enfermagem na atenção primária à saúde. Rev APS. 2018;21(2):197-205.) Thus, it is important to establish models of care that reinforce health education, aiming to expand the intervention capacity of professionals and also of people in relation to childhood cancer.(33. Freire Filho JR, Silva CB, Costa MV, Forster AC. Educação Interprofissional nas políticas de reorientação da formação profissional em saúde no Brasil. Saúde Debate. 2019;43(Spe 1):86-96.,99. Lima IM. Câncer infantojuvenil: ações de enfermagem na atenção primária à saúde. Rev APS. 2018;21(2):197-205.)

It is known that the occurrence of cancer in children and adolescents is considered rare when compared to adults, yet it is the leading cause of death from diseases in children aged 0 to 19 years.(1010. Brasil. Ministério da Saúde. Instituto Nacional de Câncer José Alencar Gomes da Silva (INCA). Incidência, mortalidade e morbidade hospitalar por câncer em crianças, adolescentes e adultos jovens no Brasil: informações dos registros de câncer do sistema de mortalidade. Rio de Janeiro: INCA; 2016 [citado 2020 Dez 30]. Disponível em: https://www.inca.gov.br/publicacoes/livros/incidencia-mortalidade-e-morbidade-hospitalar-por-cancer-em-criancas-adolescentes
https://www.inca.gov.br/publicacoes/livr...
) The specific aspects of childhood cancer, i.e., low incidence and unspecific signs and symptoms, can be considered conditions difficult to identify for professionals working in Primary Care, whose contact with similar events is infrequent.(99. Lima IM. Câncer infantojuvenil: ações de enfermagem na atenção primária à saúde. Rev APS. 2018;21(2):197-205.,1111. Miranda LR, Melaragno AL, Pina-Oliveira AA. Diagnóstico precoce do câncer infanto-juvenil na atenção primária à saúde e contribuições do enfermeiro: revisão da literatura. Rev Saúde. 2017;11(3-4):63-74. Review.)

Among the ways found to minimize the harms resulting from the disease and the impact caused by it, there are suspicion and early diagnosis and, in this sense, Primary Care has a fundamental role, both in the performance of qualified listening, and in care based on a bond with the whole family, thus allowing a continuous articulation in the Healthcare Network (RAS - Rede de Atenção à Saúde), making assertive referrals to specialized centers, expanding the possibility of quick start of treatment, which, in turn, lead to a better prognosis and the reduction of mortality from these causes.(1212. Handayani K, Sitaresmi MN, Supriyadi E, Widjajanto PH, Susilawati D, Njuguna F, et al. Delays in diagnosis and treatment of childhood cancer in Indonesia. Pediatr Blood Cancer. 2016;63(12):2189-96.,1313. Brasil. Ministério da Saúde. Protocolo de diagnóstico precoce do câncer pediátrico. Brasília (DF): Ministério da Saúde; 2017 [citado 2021 Jan 20]. Disponível em: http://bvsms.saude.gov.br/bvs/publicacoes/protocolo_diagnostico_precoce_cancer_pediatrico.pdf
http://bvsms.saude.gov.br/bvs/publicacoe...
)

Therefore, this investigation is part of a larger project entitled “Crianças com câncer é difícil diagnosticar? um estudo sobre a temática na Atenção Básica”, and aims to analyze the perception of professionals working in this sphere about their professional training related to childhood cancer.

Methods

This is an exploratory study, with a qualitative approach, guided by social research(1414. Minayo MC, Deslandes SF, Gomes R. Pesquisa social: teoria, método e criatividade. Petrópolis: Vozes; 2009.) developed with Primary Care professionals in the city of Campinas, state of São Paulo, Brazil.

Campinas has approximately 1,182,429 inhabitants,(1515. Instituto Brasileiro de Geografia e Estatística. Infográficos Cidades@ São Paulo, Campinas. Rio de Janeiro: IBGE; 2018 [citado 2021 Jan 20]. Disponível em: http://www.ibge.gov.br/cidadesat/painel/painel.php?codmun=350950
http://www.ibge.gov.br/cidadesat/painel/...
) assisted by 63 health centers (HC), distributed in 05 health districts (HD): North, South, Southwest, Northwest, and East. These HC, organized from the expanded model of Family Health Strategy (FHS), assisting around 20,000 inhabitants each.

It is noteworthy that the municipality’s Primary Care adopts the Paidéia support model, with territorialization, teamwork, matrix support, expanded clinic and unique therapeutic project,(1616. Oliveira MM, Campos GW. Formação para o Apoio Matricial: percepção dos profissionais sobre processos de formação. Physis. 2017;27(2):187-206.) with distinct professionals, adapted according to the local specifics.

The study setting consisted of 04 HC that had a similar population, physical facilities, demand for care and human resources, with the characteristic of being distant from each other. In this way, each HC selected was located in a different HD.

Before carrying out the data collection, the researchers visited the HC, with the aim of presenting the study in team meetings, allowing professionals to get to know the research. This moment of initial approximation allowed taking note of participants’ professional categories, as well as their working time in the unit.

Workers who make up the FHS were included in the study, comprising professional categories of secondary and higher education. After the invitation, professionals who expressed interest participated, and the sample was defined by convenience. Those who worked for less than 06 months in the unitwere excluded, as shown in Figure 1.

Figure 1
Flow of organization of field work, recruitment, completion and feedback of the study

The study was conducted through focus groups (FG),(1717. Souza MK, Lima YO, Paz BM, Costa EA, Cunha AB, Santos R. Potencialidades da técnica de grupo focal para a pesquisa em vigilância sanitária e atenção primária à saúde. Rev Pesq Qualitat. 2019;7(13):57-71.) carried out in the HC’s own rooms and at times agreed with the management of the health units, so that there was no prejudice in the service provided. No interferences were experienced during the FG.

The records were made through audio recordings, and to identify the participants, at the beginning of each speech, they presented themselves saying their professional category.

All FG were conducted from the same semi-structured script, containing the following themes: Children’s cancer in professional training and experiences in Primary Care.

Each FG had an average duration of 35 minutes, and before the end of each one, a validation was carried out, which brought together a synthesis of the discussions held. All FG were moderated by a master nurse in collective health with experience in conducting FG, favoring a punctual approach, obtaining 02 hours and 19 minutes of recorded content, from which 34 pages of manually transcribed material were produced. There was no saturation criterion.

Transcription, internal validation and analysis steps were carried out independently by three researchers involved in the research, including a researcher who participated in the collection, a doctor holding a PhD in Public Health and a dentist holding a PhD in social dentistry, all with experience in the subject. The researchers did not adopt software to support the analysis of qualitative data. It is noteworthy that there was no loss in recordings or problems during collection.

The material produced was based on the full transcription of the FG, which were later analyzed by the thematic modality of Content Analysis by Bardin,(1818. Bardin L. Análise de conteúdo. São Paulo: Almedina; 2011. 280 p.) according to the following path: meeting of the corpus of analysis, carrying out text skimming of the findings, in-depth reading, constitution and interpretative analysis of categories and discussion with relevant literature. From analysis, two central categories emerged: “Experiences and professional training facing children and youth cancer in Primary Care” and “Comprehensiveness of care for children and adolescents with cancer in Primary Care and professional qualification”. Participants had access to the research results through the final research report, discussed in the unit’s team meetings and made available to local and municipal management.

To conduct this study, ethical precepts of Resolution 466/2012 of the Brazilian National Health Council (Conselho Nacional de Saúde) were followed, and the research project was approved by the Institutional Review Board of Universidade Federal de São Paulo - UNIFESP/EPM (CAAE (Certificado de Apresentação para Apreciação Ética - Certificate of Presentation for Ethical Consideration) 22920213.5. 0000.5505).

Results

04 FG were carried out with the participation of 27 professionals from high school and college who work in Primary Care: 03 nurses, 06 doctors, 01 dentist, 06 nursing assistants, 01 popular educator and 10 Community Health Workers (CHW).

After the steps of transcribing the speeches from the FG, organizing the corpus of analysis, floating reading followed by in-depth reading, two categories of analysis emerged, as shown in Figure 2.

Figure 2
Emerging themes from the focus groups that contributed to training the analysis categories

Experiences and professional training regarding childhood cancer in Primary Care

High school and college-educated professionals were investigated and, in their statements, it is clear that, in relation to the diagnosis and treatment/care of cancer in childhood and adolescence, there was little contact with the subject, both in relation to experiences and through of professional training. The following excerpts exemplify this inference:

I had absolutely nothing, at most a few slides in college (Nurse) (FG 3).

No, we never had anything (CHW) (FG 2).

I had nothing (CHW) (FG 4).

Primary Care professionals report having little knowledge about childhood cancer, summarized in a few classes during graduation, and when the topic was presented, it was based on quick cases, not allowing for real learning:

I had a very small approach to general oncology. Even though I studied at a very good place in the area of oncology, I saw very few cases with children... even so, it was very limited (Family Doctor) (FG 4).

My training in nursing technicians was very superficial, as I didn’t even have contact in the internships, in fact, with the technician I didn’t even go to pediatrics itself (Nursing Technician) (FG 4).

I also had very little know-how, in fact I didn’t! In our undergraduate classes, in pediatrics, we only had one case, and in only one case, you don’t see anything (Preceptor of Internal Medicine) (FG 4).

In Primary Care, the professional nurse follows the longitudinality of individual and family care, in addition to acting in the management of health services. However, in their perceptions, they feel unprepared to deal with cases of childhood cancer, including the implementation of actions for early diagnosis and identification of signs and symptoms.

My training as a nurse focused on care, but it was very superficial in terms of childhood cancer, almost nothing. I think that the health professional, as a whole, is not prepared yet. (Nurse) (FG 4).

Regarding CHW, it is clear that information about reality is not problematized with health organizations, and the construction of meanings for their practices is carried out without institutional support, bringing together knowledge that comes from their personal experiences, and little contextualized with the organization of policies and the RAS itself.

In my CHW training, we didn’t see anything, there’s nothing about cancer in children, nor about death. Nothing! What we have experience is living as a human being, relatives and neighbors. But to say that I learned that... studying it... no! (CHW) (FG 4).

In some cases, professionals emphasized that learning related to the approach to childhood cancer occurred as a result of personal experiences, as shown in the following excerpts:

When I helped this child that I told, I knew I needed to do that because of my experience with my daughter, but nothing was given here, for example: how we should approach it or how we [should] do it... (CHW) (FG 2).

I never had...I learned from life (Nursing Assistant) (FG4).

Then you learn to diagnose, YOU have to get by (Family Doctor) (FG 3).

The professionals expressed, during the FG, the importance of training activities related to the approach to childhood cancer after entering the world of work:

But I think that there is always a need for recycling because it is a need we have. This is a complicated topic, even pediatricians do not like to make this diagnosis. In the past, we had some large, very good recycling.... I think this is important, you have to relive this topic, there are no pediatricians who are easy with this, I’ve always had good training, it was discussed, but not enough (Pediatrician) (FG 1).

In my area (dentistry), it is very rare indeed, the emphasis is on adults and elderly people. Every year we have recycling, but it is always related to adults, for example: smokers, alcoholics (dentist surgeon) (FG 1).

What I know is what I’ve learned here, in our continuing education, I even see it that way (Preceptor of Internal Medicine) (FG 4).

Comprehensive care for children and adolescents with cancer in Primary Care and professional training

Ensuring comprehensive healthcare comes from an articulated process of organization of services and implies the need for care that combines collaborative work, as a team, and at different levels of complexity.

Study participants pointed out difficulties in the approach of childhood cancer that are beyond the diagnosis. In the excerpts recorded below, little or no preparation is unveiled to ensure comprehensive care, with issues different from the biological aspects of the disease:

How to deal with this, to deal with the parents, to deal with the child, to deal with ourselves, and to deal with your own anguish? So, when we think about dealing with a child with cancer, that’s something to be desired... (Family Doctor) (FG 3).

Today, this issue of working the tact of the patient’s feeling is very lacking, as it all depends on the diagnosis, the exams, and what this will trigger. But how are we going to work? Deal with it? And how will the family live with it? These questions are a little out of the curriculum (Family Doctor) (FG 3).

The biggest load in our training focuses on clinical aspects... the technologies of how the person deals with the problem they have, or, how the family deals with, in my opinion, this is relatively new here in Brazil. In general, he is disabled (Family Doctor) (FG 1).

In the practical [classes] we had, it was just [debated] the diagnosis and nothing more. (Family Doctor) (FG 4).

The difficulty perceived by the professionals is clearly expressed in relation to how they deal with situations related to childhood cancer, as well as the lack of humanization in the practices aimed at this group, because there was not proper preparation, forcing the completion of a treatment entirely focused on the examination and medications, not looking at the child as a whole.

I didn’t learn in college how to deal with finitude, with palliative care, with acceptance of death... even more with the child. We have this difficulty in doing this even for the elderly, and with children it is kind of unacceptable. We are not prepared for death, even that health professional who deals with it all the time. I think we have difficulty, because we, as professionals, know the natural progression of the disease, and we suffer in advance. Now the family, it clings to the speck of hope that it will cure, that it will work [...] the health professional has to be more prepared to prepare the family to deal with this issue of death and disease, resilience (Nurse) (FG 4).

What we don’t have is citizen training, because with our capitalist society, the issue of spirituality is rarely discussed. Not the religion itself, such as the Catholic religion, etc., but the question of spirituality. Thinking about death and life are things that with palliative conditions are starting to enter the curriculum. Internationally, there are courses that deal with spirituality, and I think that because we don’t have it, we are not prepared to think about these things (Preceptor of Internal Medicine) (FG 4).

In training, we are not very concerned about this doctor-patient relationship, in the human relationship (Family Doctor) (FG 3).

Discussion

The speeches revealed gaps in the training of professionals in Primary Care, and, in general, perceptions turn to little or no contact with the theme of childhood cancer. The professional training process should favor collaborative teamwork, establishing learning strategies that encourage dialogue, exchange, transdisciplinarity between different formal and non-formal knowledge that contribute to health promotion actions at individual and collective levels.(1919. Casanova IA, Batista NA, Moreno LR. A educação interprofissional e a prática compartilhada em programas de residência multiprofissional em saúde. Interface. 2018;22(Suppl 1):1325-37.

20. Carvalho MS, Merhy EE, Sousa MF. Repensando as políticas de Saúde no Brasil: Educação Permanente em Saúde centrada no encontro e no saber da experiência. Interface. 2019;23:e190211.
-2121. Nuin JJ, Méndez MJ. Porque precisamos da educação interprofissional. In: Nuin JJ, Francisco EI. Manual de educação interprofissional em saúde. Rio de Janeiro: Elsevier, 2019. p.13.)

The findings of this study corroborate some examples already mentioned in the literature,(99. Lima IM. Câncer infantojuvenil: ações de enfermagem na atenção primária à saúde. Rev APS. 2018;21(2):197-205.,1111. Miranda LR, Melaragno AL, Pina-Oliveira AA. Diagnóstico precoce do câncer infanto-juvenil na atenção primária à saúde e contribuições do enfermeiro: revisão da literatura. Rev Saúde. 2017;11(3-4):63-74. Review.,2222. Barros S, Claro HG. The teaching-learning process in mental health: the student’s perspective about psychosocial rehabilitation and citizenship. Rev Esc Enferm USP. 2011;45(3):700-7.)observing a considerable gap related to the training of professionals in Primary Care, with intense shortages on the subject, including nursing, who declare that qualification strategies are necessary so that they can consequently identify early childhood cancer.(1111. Miranda LR, Melaragno AL, Pina-Oliveira AA. Diagnóstico precoce do câncer infanto-juvenil na atenção primária à saúde e contribuições do enfermeiro: revisão da literatura. Rev Saúde. 2017;11(3-4):63-74. Review.)As an example, the work of Rosa is cited,( 2323. Rosa LM, Andrade AE, Berndt LK, Anders JC, Radünz V, Souza AI. Atenção Oncológica na Atenção Básica: projeto de extensão na formação de acadêmicos de enfermagem. Rev Eletr Extensão. 2017;14(26):107-18. ) which revealed a deficit of qualification related to the oncology theme in Primary Care.

It is noteworthy that the experience has great potential for training and transformation.(2020. Carvalho MS, Merhy EE, Sousa MF. Repensando as políticas de Saúde no Brasil: Educação Permanente em Saúde centrada no encontro e no saber da experiência. Interface. 2019;23:e190211.) It is essential to recognize that there is a relationship of complementarity and recomposition between what is learned in institutionalized training and learning derived from experience.(2222. Barros S, Claro HG. The teaching-learning process in mental health: the student’s perspective about psychosocial rehabilitation and citizenship. Rev Esc Enferm USP. 2011;45(3):700-7.) However, the initial contact with topics of great relevance, such as childhood cancer, in formal education should be made possible.(2323. Rosa LM, Andrade AE, Berndt LK, Anders JC, Radünz V, Souza AI. Atenção Oncológica na Atenção Básica: projeto de extensão na formação de acadêmicos de enfermagem. Rev Eletr Extensão. 2017;14(26):107-18.)

Allied to this conception, comes the concept of Continuing Education in Health, which aims to promote learning from problems faced in daily work, in order to find answers and transform practices.(11. Brasil. Ministério da Saúde. Portaria GM/MS No 1.996 de 20 de agosto de 2007. Dispõe sobre as diretrizes para a implementação da Política Nacional de Educação Permanente em Saúde. Brasília (DF): Ministério da Saúde; 2007 [citado 2020 Dez 20]. Disponível em: http://bvsms.saude.gov.br/bvs/saudelegis/gm/2007/prt1996_20_08_2007.html
http://bvsms.saude.gov.br/bvs/saudelegis...
,2424. Cavalcanti FO, Guizardi FL. Educação continuada ou permanente em saúde? análise da produção Pan-americana da saúde. Trab Educ Saúde. 2018;16(1):99-122.)It is hoped that professionals improve cancer care, especially aimed at patients children and adolescents, from the development of technical knowledge in the biological, psychological and emotional sphere. (2525. Rezende VM, Neves GF. Formação, treinamento e aperfeiçoamento em oncologia infantojuvenil no âmbito do Programa Nacional de Apoio à Atenção oncológica: um panorama do triênio 2016-2018. Rev Bras Cancerol. 2018;64(3):327-3.)

The need for a permanent training process can be translated into a vision of greater awareness by incorporating new responsibilities, directly relating to the decision-making process in professional practice.(2424. Cavalcanti FO, Guizardi FL. Educação continuada ou permanente em saúde? análise da produção Pan-americana da saúde. Trab Educ Saúde. 2018;16(1):99-122.)

These aspects are essential for professionals to be engaged and committed to the health of the population, hence the important task of identifying knowledge gaps and training focused on cancer care. Unlike adults, cancer in children and youth presents a multiplicity of signs and symptoms that are similar to countless events typical of childhood, i.e., the first symptoms of childhood cancer are considered non-specific.(1212. Handayani K, Sitaresmi MN, Supriyadi E, Widjajanto PH, Susilawati D, Njuguna F, et al. Delays in diagnosis and treatment of childhood cancer in Indonesia. Pediatr Blood Cancer. 2016;63(12):2189-96.)This fact, associated with the low prevalence of this condition in relation to other diseases with which it shares signs and symptoms, makes the positive predictive value of these symptoms for childhood cancer to be low and, consequently, makes early diagnosis difficult.

When thinking about comprehensive care for children and adolescents with cancer in Primary Care, collaborative teamwork becomes essential, with emphasis on training focused on healthcare, which requires the collective construction of knowledge.(1919. Casanova IA, Batista NA, Moreno LR. A educação interprofissional e a prática compartilhada em programas de residência multiprofissional em saúde. Interface. 2018;22(Suppl 1):1325-37.) Interprofessional Education (IPE) emerges as a desirable horizon in the sense of providing the development of common and collaborative skills that qualify health work, especially in the context of chronic diseases.(2121. Nuin JJ, Méndez MJ. Porque precisamos da educação interprofissional. In: Nuin JJ, Francisco EI. Manual de educação interprofissional em saúde. Rio de Janeiro: Elsevier, 2019. p.13.,2626. Agreli HF, Peduzzi M, Silva MC. Patient centred care in interprofessional collaborative practice. Interface. 2016;20(59):905-16.)

However, with Flexner report influences and its consequences for courses in the health area, the knowledge offered to students is predominantly based on uniprofessional training and on the understanding of illness restricted to the biological body, disfunctionalizing it in relation to normality.(2727. Flexner A. Medical education in the United States and Canada. From the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, Bulletin Number Four, 1910. Bull World Health Organ. 2002;80(7):594-602.) A body fragmented into organs, understood by isolated disciplines and seen from organic lesions only.(2828. Gonze GG, Silva GA. A integralidade na formação dos profissionais de saúde: tecendo valores. Physis. 2011;21(1):129-146.)

Furthermore, the technical-scientific imagination of health encourages the understanding of the natural history of diseases, not valuing the singularities of living and feeling.(2929. Ceccim RB, Carvalho YM. Ensino da saúde na integralidade: a educação dos profissionais de saúde no SUS. In: Pinheiro R, Ceccim RB, Mattos RA, organizadores. Ensinar saúde: a integralidade e o SUS nos cursos de graduação na área da saúde. Rio de Janeiro: CEPESC, IMS/UFRJ, ABRASCO; 2011. p. 69–92.) This historical constitution explains why most health professionals have insufficient training to develop work based on the SUS principles.(3030. Barbosa LG, Damasceno RF, Silveira DM, Costa SM, Leite MT. Recursos humanos e estratégia saúde da família no norte de minas gerais: avanços e desafios. Cad Saúde Colet. 2019;27(3):287-94.

31. Cunha MS, Alvarenga EC. Educação permanente para avaliação em saúde: uma proposta na arte do encontro. Saúde Redes. 2018;4(1):75-84.
-3232. Carnut L. Cuidado, integralidade e atenção primária: articulação essencial para refletir sobre o setor saúde no Brasil. Saúde Debate. 2017;41(115):1177-86.)

Deficiencies in training to address childhood cancer, even though this is a problem marked by being the leading cause of death from diseases in this age group,(11. Brasil. Ministério da Saúde. Portaria GM/MS No 1.996 de 20 de agosto de 2007. Dispõe sobre as diretrizes para a implementação da Política Nacional de Educação Permanente em Saúde. Brasília (DF): Ministério da Saúde; 2007 [citado 2020 Dez 20]. Disponível em: http://bvsms.saude.gov.br/bvs/saudelegis/gm/2007/prt1996_20_08_2007.html
http://bvsms.saude.gov.br/bvs/saudelegis...
) reinforce how far training is from social needs. Taking into account that early diagnosis is essential to minimize the impacts caused by the disease,(1010. Brasil. Ministério da Saúde. Instituto Nacional de Câncer José Alencar Gomes da Silva (INCA). Incidência, mortalidade e morbidade hospitalar por câncer em crianças, adolescentes e adultos jovens no Brasil: informações dos registros de câncer do sistema de mortalidade. Rio de Janeiro: INCA; 2016 [citado 2020 Dez 30]. Disponível em: https://www.inca.gov.br/publicacoes/livros/incidencia-mortalidade-e-morbidade-hospitalar-por-cancer-em-criancas-adolescentes
https://www.inca.gov.br/publicacoes/livr...
) it is essential that health professionals build knowledge, skills and competences aimed at this problem during training.

Thus, the approach consistent with this understanding is focused on the technical and biological sphere, with excessive use of hard technologies, to the detriment of light-relational care technologies.(3333. Lima AA, Jesus DS, Silva TL. Densidade tecnológica e o cuidado humanizado em enfermagem: a realidade de dois serviços de saúde. Physis. 2018;28(3):e280320.) It is noted that training in health has not been focused on teaching care practices, since it does not prioritize the understanding of the living, subjectivated and unique body that demands more than diagnosis and technique.(3333. Lima AA, Jesus DS, Silva TL. Densidade tecnológica e o cuidado humanizado em enfermagem: a realidade de dois serviços de saúde. Physis. 2018;28(3):e280320.)Living with the patient requires qualified listening and sensitive and delicate attention, linked to their historical, social and family context,(3434. Fonsêca GS, Souza JV. Narrative of an educational path: providing a (new) meaning to medical education. Interface. 2019;23(Suppl 1):e180059.) especially when it comes to childhood cancer.

The current Brazilian National Policy on Continuing Education in Health (Política Nacional de Educação Permanente em Saúde)(11. Brasil. Ministério da Saúde. Portaria GM/MS No 1.996 de 20 de agosto de 2007. Dispõe sobre as diretrizes para a implementação da Política Nacional de Educação Permanente em Saúde. Brasília (DF): Ministério da Saúde; 2007 [citado 2020 Dez 20]. Disponível em: http://bvsms.saude.gov.br/bvs/saudelegis/gm/2007/prt1996_20_08_2007.html
http://bvsms.saude.gov.br/bvs/saudelegis...
) emphasizes the need for workers’ qualification to adhere to local needs and realities in order to contribute to the transformation of work practices and organization. From the analyzed categories, the relevance of continuing education to qualify care practices in Primary Care is reinforced, pointing to the need to also establish an agenda with a specific focus on the signs and symptoms of cancer in this life cycle.

In this context, there is an appreciation of pedagogical practices centered on problematization and health work processes, with an emphasis on collaborative teamwork without underestimating the specific importance that each profession has.(3535. Cardoso ML, Costa PP, Costa DM, Xavier C, Souza RM. The National Permanent Health Education Policy in Public Health Schools: reflections from practice. Cien Saude Colet. 2017;22(5):1489–500.)

When considering the specificities of childhood cancer, professionals’ knowledge gaps can be even greater, as evidenced by participants’ speeches. The commitment of each professional must be seen in an active way of praxis-action and reflection on reality, demanding an improvement, overcoming specialism, including the expansion of their knowledge about man, and his way of being in the world.(2929. Ceccim RB, Carvalho YM. Ensino da saúde na integralidade: a educação dos profissionais de saúde no SUS. In: Pinheiro R, Ceccim RB, Mattos RA, organizadores. Ensinar saúde: a integralidade e o SUS nos cursos de graduação na área da saúde. Rio de Janeiro: CEPESC, IMS/UFRJ, ABRASCO; 2011. p. 69–92.)

A limitation present in the study was the way in which the FG were carried out, both because they were conducted only by one researcher, and also because of the reduced time taken to carry out each one of them. This fact occurred because the FG could only be held at times when the health service was not harmed, which made the participation of all researchers unfeasible. However, this limitation was alleviated with the effective participation of three researchers in the steps of transcription, analysis and interpretation of results.

Conclusion

From professionals’ perceptions, there was little contact and insufficient preparation to list assertive actions related to childhood cancer in Primary Care. Moreover, professional qualification was often based on personal experiences, with the presence of difficulties in dealing with situations related to childhood cancer, with little in-depth analysis of the problems identified in the practice of services. The findings of the study point to the need for future changes in the inclusion of the theme childhood cancer in Primary Care; improvements in the quality of continuing education in services; and implementation of early diagnosis actions, in order to promote comprehensive health for children, adolescents, and their families.

Acknowledgments

We would like to thank the Coordination for the Improvement of Higher Education Personnel - Brazil (CAPES). Doctoral scholarship and to Universidade Federal da Fronteira Sul Graduate Promotion 1010/GR/UFFS/2019.

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Edited by

Associate Editor (Peer review process): Denise Myuki Kusahara (https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9498-0868) Escola Paulista de Enfermagem, Universidade Federal de São Paulo, São Paulo, SP, Brazil

Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    11 Mar 2022
  • Date of issue
    2022

History

  • Received
    30 Sept 2020
  • Accepted
    26 May 2021
Escola Paulista de Enfermagem, Universidade Federal de São Paulo R. Napoleão de Barros, 754, 04024-002 São Paulo - SP/Brasil, Tel./Fax: (55 11) 5576 4430 - São Paulo - SP - Brazil
E-mail: actapaulista@unifesp.br