Financial Distress Screening and Navigation in Pediatric Oncology Within the National Cancer Institute Community Oncology Research Program.

IF 4.6 3区 医学 Q1 ONCOLOGY JCO oncology practice Pub Date : 2025-05-01 Epub Date: 2025-02-06 DOI:10.1200/OP-24-00786
Joanna M Robles, Emily V Dressler, Carol Kittel, Chandylen L Nightingale, Wade T Kyono, Sheila J Santacroce, John M Salsman, Kimberly Montez, Pinki Prasad, Aaron J Sugalski, Timothy J D Ohlsen, Daniel J Zheng, Susan K Parsons, Melissa P Beauchemin
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Abstract

Purpose: Cancer-related financial hardship is associated with poor quality of life, risk of household material hardship, and psychological distress for families affected by pediatric cancer. Current processes on financial distress screening and financial navigation across the pediatric National Cancer Institute Community Oncology Research Program (NCORP) network remain unknown.

Methods: Financial distress screening and financial navigation services among NCORP practices were assessed using two survey items from the 2022 NCORP Landscape Assessment Survey. Practices answering yes to providing oncology care for pediatric patients were included. Univariable models were used to test associations between practice characteristics and financial screening and financial navigation.

Results: Of the 53 NCORP practices serving pediatric patients with cancer that responded to the survey, 44 (83%) reported routinely conducting financial distress screening. Most of the practices reported that financial screening is completed by social workers (n = 40/44, 91%). One third of practices reported financial screening using a survey completed by patients/caregivers (n = 14/44, 32%). Almost all practices (n = 51/53, 96%) reported responding to financial needs through a social worker. One third of the practices reported having a cancer-specific financial navigator (n = 17/53, 32%) or a nondedicated (not cancer-specific) financial navigator (n = 19/53, 36%). Practices that served a proportion of new patients with cancer at or above the national average of Hispanic individuals in the United States were as likely to screen for financial distress as practices below the national average (odds ratio, 2.42 [95% CI, 0.45 to 13.03]; P = .30).

Conclusion: Most pediatric NCORP practices report screening for financial distress. Fewer groups offer dedicated cancer-specific financial navigation, and practices vary. Further research is needed to explore the development and implementation of standardized financial distress measures and financial navigation interventions within pediatric cancer care.

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国家癌症研究所社区肿瘤研究项目中儿童肿瘤的财务困境筛查和导航。
目的:癌症相关的经济困难与儿童癌症患者家庭的生活质量差、家庭物质困难风险和心理困扰有关。目前,美国儿科癌症研究所社区肿瘤研究计划(NCORP)网络的财务困境筛查和财务导航过程仍不清楚。方法:利用2022年NCORP景观评估调查中的两个调查项目,对NCORP实践中的财务困境筛选和财务导航服务进行评估。回答“是”的做法包括为儿科患者提供肿瘤护理。单变量模型用于检验实践特征与财务筛选和财务导航之间的关联。结果:在53家NCORP为儿科癌症患者提供服务的诊所中,有44家(83%)报告定期进行财务困境筛查。大多数实践报告财务筛选是由社会工作者完成的(n = 40/ 44,91%)。三分之一的实践报告使用由患者/护理人员完成的调查进行财务筛查(n = 14/ 44,32%)。几乎所有的实践(n = 51/ 53,96%)都报告通过社会工作者应对经济需求。三分之一的实践报告有癌症特定的财务导航员(n = 17/ 53,32%)或非专用(非癌症特定)财务导航员(n = 19/ 53,36%)。在美国,新癌症患者的比例等于或高于西班牙裔美国人的全国平均水平的诊所,与低于全国平均水平的诊所一样可能筛查财务困境(优势比,2.42 [95% CI, 0.45至13.03];P = .30)。结论:大多数儿科NCORP实践报告了财务困境筛查。很少有组织提供专门针对癌症的财务指导,而且做法也各不相同。需要进一步的研究来探索在儿童癌症护理中制定和实施标准化的财务困境措施和财务导航干预措施。
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CiteScore
6.40
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7.50%
发文量
518
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