Playdon Mary, Ferrucci Leah M, McCorkle Ruth, Stein Kevin D, Cannady Rachel, Sanft Tara, Cartmel Brenda
Yale School of Public Health, Yale University, 55 Church Street, Suite 801, New Haven, CT, 06510, USA.
Yale Cancer Center, New Haven, CT, USA.
J Cancer Surviv. 2016 Aug;10(4):674-85. doi: 10.1007/s11764-015-0513-4. Epub 2016 Jan 7.
Survivorship care plans (SCPs) provide cancer patients and health care providers with a treatment summary and outline of recommended medical follow-up. Few studies have investigated the information needs and preferred sources among long-term cancer survivors.
Cancer survivors of the ten most common cancers enrolled in the longitudinal Study of Cancer Survivors-I (SCS-I) completed a survey 9 years post-diagnosis (n = 3138); at time of diagnosis of the SCS-I cohort, SCPs were not considered usual care. We assessed participants' current desire and preferred sources for information across ten SCP items and evaluated factors associated with information need 9 years after diagnosis.
The proportion of long-term cancer survivors endorsing a need for cancer and health information 9 years post-diagnosis ranged from 43 % (cancer screening) to 9 % (consequences of cancer on ability to work). Print media and personalized reading materials were the most preferred information sources. Younger age, higher education, race other than non-Hispanic white, later cancer stage, having breast cancer, having ≥2 comorbidities, and self-reporting poor health were associated with greater informational need (p < 0.05).
CONCLUSIONS/IMPLICATIONS FOR CANCER SURVIVORS: Long-term cancer survivors continue to report health information needs for most SCP items and would prefer a print format; however, level of need differs by socio-demographic and cancer characteristics. Cancer survivors who did not previously receive a SCP may still benefit from receiving SCP content, and strategies for enabling dissemination to long-term survivors warrant further investigation.
癌症生存护理计划(SCPs)为癌症患者和医疗服务提供者提供治疗总结及推荐医学随访概述。很少有研究调查长期癌症幸存者的信息需求及偏好的信息来源。
参加癌症幸存者纵向研究-I(SCS-I)的十种最常见癌症的幸存者在确诊9年后完成了一项调查(n = 3138);在SCS-I队列确诊时,SCPs不被视为常规护理。我们评估了参与者对十个SCP项目当前的信息需求及偏好的信息来源,并评估了确诊9年后与信息需求相关的因素。
确诊9年后认可需要癌症及健康信息的长期癌症幸存者比例从43%(癌症筛查)到9%(癌症对工作能力的影响)不等。印刷媒体和个性化阅读材料是最受青睐的信息来源。年龄较小、教育程度较高、非西班牙裔白人以外的种族、癌症分期较晚、患有乳腺癌、有≥2种合并症以及自我报告健康状况较差与更高的信息需求相关(p < 0.05)。
结论/对癌症幸存者的启示:长期癌症幸存者对大多数SCP项目仍表示有健康信息需求,且更喜欢印刷形式;然而,需求程度因社会人口统计学和癌症特征而异。以前未接受SCP的癌症幸存者仍可能从获取SCP内容中受益,促进向长期幸存者传播的策略值得进一步研究。