Oeffinger Kevin C, Mertens Ann C, Hudson Melissa M, Gurney James G, Casillas Jacqueline, Chen Hegang, Whitton John, Yeazel Mark, Yasui Yutaka, Robison Leslie L
Department of Family Practice and Community Medicine, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, Tex 75390-9067, USA.
Ann Fam Med. 2004 Jan-Feb;2(1):61-70. doi: 10.1370/afm.26.
We wanted to determine the type of outpatient medical care reported by young adult survivors of childhood cancer and to examine factors associated with limited medical care.
We analyzed data from 9,434 adult childhood cancer survivors enrolled in a retrospective cohort study who completed a baseline questionnaire. They had a mean age of 26.8 years (range 18 to 48 years), 47% were female, 12% were minorities, and 16% were uninsured. Four self-reported outcome measures were used to determine outpatient medical care in a 2-year period: general contact with the health care system, general physical examination, cancer-related medical visit, and medical visit at a cancer center.
Eighty-seven percent reported general medical contact, 71.4% a general physical examination, 41.9% a cancer-related visit, and 19.2%, a visit at a cancer center. Factors associated with not reporting a general physical examination, a cancer-related visit, or a cancer center visit included no health insurance (odds ratio [OR] = 2.34; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.97-2.77), male sex (OR = 1.65; 95% CI, 1.44-1.88), lack of concern for future health (OR = 1.57; 95% CI, 1.36-1.82), and age 30 years or older in comparison with those 18 to 29 years (OR = 1.56; 95% CI, 1.35-1.81). The likelihood of reporting a cancer-related visit or a general physical examination decreased significantly as the survivor aged or the time from cancer diagnosis increased. This trend was also significant for those treated with therapies associated with substantial risk for cardiovascular disease or breast cancer.
Primary care physicians provide health care for most of this growing high-risk population. To optimize risk-based care, it is critical that cancer centers and primary care physicians develop methods to communicate effectively and longitudinally.
我们希望确定儿童癌症成年幸存者报告的门诊医疗类型,并研究与医疗服务受限相关的因素。
我们分析了一项回顾性队列研究中9434名成年儿童癌症幸存者的数据,这些幸存者完成了一份基线调查问卷。他们的平均年龄为26.8岁(范围为18至48岁),47%为女性,12%为少数族裔,16%未参保。使用四项自我报告的结局指标来确定两年内的门诊医疗情况:与医疗系统的一般接触、一般体格检查、癌症相关就诊以及在癌症中心就诊。
87%报告有一般医疗接触,71.4%进行过一般体格检查,41.9%有癌症相关就诊,19.2%在癌症中心就诊。与未报告一般体格检查、癌症相关就诊或癌症中心就诊相关的因素包括未参保(优势比[OR]=2.34;95%置信区间[CI],1.97 - 2.77)、男性(OR = 1.65;95% CI,1.44 - 1.88)、对未来健康缺乏关注(OR = 1.57;95% CI,1.36 - 1.82)以及与18至29岁者相比年龄在30岁及以上(OR = 1.56;95% CI,1.35 - 1.81)。随着幸存者年龄增长或自癌症诊断时间增加,报告癌症相关就诊或一般体格检查的可能性显著降低。对于接受与心血管疾病或乳腺癌高风险相关治疗的患者,这一趋势也很显著。
初级保健医生为这一不断增长的高风险人群中的大多数提供医疗服务。为优化基于风险的医疗服务,癌症中心和初级保健医生制定有效且长期的沟通方法至关重要。