Snyder Claire F, Earle Craig C, Herbert Robert J, Neville Bridget A, Blackford Amanda L, Frick Kevin D
Division of General Internal Medicine, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, 624 N Broadway, Room 657, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA.
J Clin Oncol. 2008 Mar 1;26(7):1073-9. doi: 10.1200/JCO.2007.11.9859.
To explore the mix of physician specialties that long-term survivors visit and how the mix relates to preventive care.
Using the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results-Medicare database, we conducted a retrospective, longitudinal study of stage I to III Medicare fee-for-service colorectal cancer patients diagnosed in 1997. We examined physician visits and preventive care each year for 5 years, starting 366 days postdiagnosis, and how preventive service receipt related to the physician mix seen: primary care provider (PCP) only, oncologist only, both, or neither.
A total of 1,541 patients met the eligibility criteria (mean age, 76; 43% male; 85% white). During 5 years, PCP visits increased from a mean of 4.2 to 4.7 (P < .0001), and oncology visits decreased from 1.3 to 0.5 (P < .0001). Survivor care by PCPs only increased from 44% to 62%, whereas shared care by PCPs and oncologists dropped from 37% to 21% (P < .0001). Survivors who saw both PCPs and oncologists were most likely to receive influenza vaccination, mammograms, and cervical cancer screening; survivors who saw PCPs only were most likely to receive cholesterol screening and bone densitometry. Higher socioeconomic status was associated with increased influenza vaccination, mammograms, and cervical cancer screening (P < .05). Over time, there was a decrease in mammography and cervical cancer screening and an increase in influenza vaccination (P < .05).
As oncologists become less involved in survivor care, cancer-related screening decreases significantly. These results support the need for survivorship care plans that explicitly outline the roles of PCPs and oncologists in sharing care for cancer survivors, and how these roles may change over time.
探讨长期存活者就诊的医生专业组合情况,以及该组合与预防性医疗的关系。
利用监测、流行病学和最终结果-医疗保险数据库,我们对1997年诊断为I至III期医疗保险按服务收费的结直肠癌患者进行了一项回顾性纵向研究。我们从诊断后366天开始,对患者5年中的每年就诊情况和预防性医疗进行了检查,以及接受预防性服务与所看医生组合(仅初级保健医生、仅肿瘤学家、两者都看或两者都不看)之间的关系。
共有1541名患者符合纳入标准(平均年龄76岁;43%为男性;85%为白人)。在5年期间,初级保健医生的就诊次数从平均4.2次增加到4.7次(P<.0001),肿瘤学就诊次数从1.3次减少到0.5次(P<.0001)。仅由初级保健医生提供的存活者护理从44%增加到62%,而初级保健医生和肿瘤学家共同提供的护理从37%下降到21%(P<.0001)。同时看初级保健医生和肿瘤学家的存活者最有可能接受流感疫苗接种、乳房X光检查和宫颈癌筛查;仅看初级保健医生的存活者最有可能接受胆固醇筛查和骨密度测定。较高的社会经济地位与增加流感疫苗接种、乳房X光检查和宫颈癌筛查相关(P<.05)。随着时间的推移,乳房X光检查和宫颈癌筛查减少,流感疫苗接种增加(P<.05)。
随着肿瘤学家参与存活者护理的程度降低,与癌症相关的筛查显著减少。这些结果支持制定存活者护理计划的必要性明确概述初级保健医生和肿瘤学家在为癌症存活者提供共享护理中的作用,以及这些作用可能随时间如何变化。