Department of Radiation Oncology, Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Cancer. 2013 Nov 1;119(21):3854-60. doi: 10.1002/cncr.28286. Epub 2013 Aug 6.
Survivorship care plans (SCP) are currently recommended by the Institute of Medicine, and will soon be required for accreditation by the American College of Surgeons Commission on Cancer. To the best of the authors' knowledge, the impact of SCPs on cancer survivors has not been previously reported.
In 2007, the authors created an Internet tool for the creation of SCPs that provides customized guidelines for survivorship care. Users are sent a voluntary follow-up survey 1 month after initial use.
From May 2010 through January 2013, 8690 cancer survivors used the SCP tool. The most common diagnoses were breast (45%), hematologic (12%), and gastrointestinal (11%) cancers; the median age of the survivors was 51 years. Of these, 875 (10%) respondents provided information for future electronic contact and 298 responded to a 1-month follow-up survey. They reported that the information provided was "good" to "excellent" in 93% of cases, and new in 65% of cases. With regard to the emotional impact of the SCP, 62% of responding survivors believed that it provided "just enough" information, 72% felt "more informed," and 94% believed they would recommend it to others. The majority of respondents (63%) thought that the SCP changed their health care participation, and 80% shared/planned to share it with their health care team. Of those survivors who had done so, 80% reported that it improved communication with their health care providers. Greater than one-half of survey users (54%) reported that they had made or planned to make a lifestyle change in response to the SCP, most commonly dietary modification and increased exercise.
Survivorship care plans are useful vehicles with which to promote lifestyle and behavioral changes, and to assist survivors with communication with health care providers. These findings support recommendations from the Institute of Medicine and the American College of Surgeons Commission on Cancer.
生存护理计划(SCP)目前被医学研究所推荐,并且很快将被美国外科医师学院癌症委员会的认证所要求。据作者所知,SCP 对癌症幸存者的影响以前尚未报道过。
2007 年,作者创建了一个用于创建 SCP 的互联网工具,该工具为生存护理提供了定制的指导方针。用户在首次使用后 1 个月会收到一份自愿的随访调查。
从 2010 年 5 月到 2013 年 1 月,8690 名癌症幸存者使用了 SCP 工具。最常见的诊断是乳腺癌(45%)、血液系统癌症(12%)和胃肠道癌症(11%);幸存者的中位年龄为 51 岁。其中,10%(875 人)的受访者提供了未来电子联系方式的信息,298 人回复了 1 个月的随访调查。他们报告说,93%的情况下提供的信息是“好”到“优秀”,65%的情况下是新信息。关于 SCP 的情绪影响,62%的回应幸存者认为它提供了“足够”的信息,72%的人感到“更知情”,94%的人认为他们会将其推荐给他人。大多数受访者(63%)认为 SCP 改变了他们的医疗保健参与度,80%的人认为他们会将其与他们的医疗保健团队分享/计划分享。在这样做的幸存者中,80%的人报告说它改善了与医疗保健提供者的沟通。超过一半的调查用户(54%)报告说,他们已经或计划根据 SCP 做出生活方式的改变,最常见的是饮食调整和增加锻炼。
生存护理计划是促进生活方式和行为改变以及帮助幸存者与医疗保健提供者沟通的有用工具。这些发现支持医学研究所和美国外科医师学院癌症委员会的建议。