Survivorship in the community oncology practice

D. Patt
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Abstract

In this issue of COMMUNITY ONCOLOGY, we have a focus on cancer survivorship. While oncologists are knowledgeable of the need for survivorship programs to enhance quality of care along the patient care continuum, the processes of implementation of survivorship programs outside of larger organizational systems of care delivery has been limited. For those community oncologists outside of larger care delivery systems, there is a need for tools and processes to facilitate survivorship care planning. We discuss some of those issues in this month’s issue. Jennifer Klemp has done tremendous work with survivorship care training to prepare practitioners to deliver focused survivorship care. She does this by using educational videos and tools to provide education around the needs of the cancer survivor (see p. 266). In addition, there is an article out of my group in Texas Oncology discussing the practical steps of implementing a survivorship care program in a community practice (p. 272). We discuss key steps in implementation and highlight several free and publicly available tools to assist oncologists in the process of providing survivorship care. I contemplate often how we think about quality of care in oncology, and how we measure it. Donabedian has guided us in this endeavor to consider quality of care under the framework of structure, process, and then outcome (Milbank Mem Fund Q 1966;44,166-206). Oncologists have been given guidance on structural aspects of quality – survivorship programs, improvements in palliative care, the American Society on Clinical Oncology’s Quality Oncology Practice Initiative metrics – but guidance around the process of implementation in care delivery and then the true outcomes that follow is limited. Oncologists will need more help with process if we strive to improve care in meaningful ways surrounding implementation of quality initiatives. Processes will need to be efficient and effective so they can contribute to sustainable business solutions while having the primary goal of improving patient care. Then, with any luck, when we measure outcomes, they will be meaningful measures of effect and could be partnered with reimbursement strategies that facilitate quality care delivery.
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社区肿瘤学实践中的生存关系
在这一期的《社区肿瘤学》中,我们关注的是癌症幸存者。虽然肿瘤学家了解生存计划的必要性,以提高患者护理连续体的护理质量,但在更大的组织系统之外实施生存计划的过程受到限制。对于那些大型医疗服务系统之外的社区肿瘤学家来说,需要一些工具和流程来促进生存护理计划。我们将在本月的杂志中讨论其中的一些问题。Jennifer Klemp在幸存者护理培训方面做了大量的工作,让从业者准备好提供专注的幸存者护理。她通过使用教育视频和工具来提供有关癌症幸存者需求的教育(见第266页)。此外,我的小组在《德克萨斯肿瘤学》上发表了一篇文章,讨论了在社区实践中实施幸存者护理计划的实际步骤(第272页)。我们讨论了实施的关键步骤,并强调了几个免费和公开可用的工具,以协助肿瘤学家在提供生存护理的过程中。我经常思考我们如何看待肿瘤学的护理质量,以及我们如何衡量它。Donabedian引导我们在结构、过程和结果的框架下考虑护理质量(Milbank Mem Fund Q 1966;44,166-206)。肿瘤学家已经获得了质量结构方面的指导——生存计划、姑息治疗的改进、美国临床肿瘤学会的肿瘤质量实践倡议指标——但在护理交付的实施过程以及随后的真正结果方面的指导是有限的。如果我们努力以有意义的方式改善围绕实施质量倡议的护理,肿瘤学家将需要更多的过程帮助。流程需要是高效和有效的,这样它们才能为可持续的业务解决方案做出贡献,同时以改善患者护理为主要目标。然后,如果运气好的话,当我们衡量结果时,它们将是有意义的效果衡量标准,并且可以与促进高质量医疗服务的报销策略合作。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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