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☐ ☆ ✇ Journal of Advanced Nursing

Barriers and Facilitators for Nurses to Manage Medication of Cancer Pain: A Qualitative Systematic Review of Healthcare Professionals’ Perspectives

Por: Shirui Tang · Xinyu Chen · Ting Zhang · Xiaohui Dong · Huan Chen · Xianying Lu · Dingxi Bai · Ting Zhao · Shasha Wen · Huanle Liu · Jingyang Wang · Chaoming Hou · Jing Gao — Noviembre 5th 2025 at 23:31

ABSTRACT

Background

Improving global access to pain management medications for cancer patients remains a critical priority. Nurses are now understood to play an essential role in cancer pain medication management, yet the barriers and facilitators they encounter require urgent identification.

Objective

This systematic review aimed to identify the barriers and facilitators for nurses in managing cancer pain medication.

Design

This systematic review followed the Joanna Briggs Institute (JBI)'s guidelines for qualitative systematic reviews.

Methods

Eleven databases (PubMed, Web of Science, the Cochrane Library, the Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL), Embase, Scopus, OPENGREY.EU, China National Knowledge Infrastructure (CNKI), Wanfang Database, China Science and Technology Journal Database (VIP) and SinoMed) were searched from their inception to 9th July 2025. Articles were evaluated for quality using JBI critical appraisal tools. Data extraction was performed according to JBI standardised protocols, and evidence synthesis was conducted using JBI meta-aggregation, which involved extracting findings, categorising them into thematic groups and synthesising them into comprehensive statements.

Results

Twenty-four qualitative studies were reviewed in the present study. Two synthesised findings regarding the barriers and facilitators for nurses in managing cancer pain medication were integrated: (1) Barriers for nurses to manage cancer pain medication were summarised into five categories: systemic barriers, resource barriers, knowledge and skills barriers, financial and cultural barriers and communication and psychological barriers; (2) Facilitators for nurses to manage cancer pain medication were summarised into three categories: nursing capacity building, supportive care environments and collaborative support systems.

Conclusions

Multilevel barriers impede nurse-led cancer pain management, necessitating policy reforms (e.g., tiered prescribing), investments in telehealth/training and culturally responsive interprofessional collaboration. Prioritising facilitators, capacity building, supportive environments and collaboration is vital to empower nurses in delivering equitable, evidence-based pain relief.

Impact

This review equips clinical managers and policymakers with evidence to implement policy and practice reforms, such as tiered prescribing and interprofessional collaboration, which are critical to empower nurses in delivering effective cancer pain management.

Registration

This systematic review was prospectively registered in PROSPERO prior to the initiation of the search (Registration ID: CRD42024570807).

Patient or Public Contribution

There was no patient or public contribution.

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