College of Nursing, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC, United States of America.
Hollings Cancer Center, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2018 Mar 27;13(3):e0194649. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0194649. eCollection 2018.
The Institute of Medicine recommended in their landmark report "From Cancer Patient to Cancer Survivor: Lost in Transition" that services to meet the needs of cancer patients should extend beyond physical health issues to include functional and psychosocial consequences of cancer. However, no systems exist in the US to support state-level data collection on availability of support services for cancer patients. Developing a mechanism to systematically collect these data and document service availability is essential for guiding comprehensive cancer control planning efforts. This study was carried out to develop a protocol for implementing a statewide survey of all Commission on Cancer (CoC) accredited cancer centers in South Carolina and to implement the survey to examine availability of patient support services within the state. We conducted a cross-sectional survey of CoC-certified cancer centers in South Carolina. An administrator at each center completed a survey on availability of five services: 1) patient navigation; 2) distress screening; 3) genetic risk assessment and counseling, 4) survivorship care planning; and 5) palliative care. Completed surveys were received from 16 of 17 eligible centers (94%). Of the 16 centers, 44% reported providing patient navigation; 31% reported conducting distress screening; and 44% reported providing genetic risk assessment and counseling. Over 85% of centers reported having an active palliative care program, palliative care providers and a hospice program, but fewer had palliative outpatient services (27%), palliative inpatient beds (50%) or inpatient consultation teams (31%). This was a small, yet systematic survey in one state. This study demonstrated a practical method for successfully monitoring statewide availability of cancer patient support services, including identifying service gaps.
美国医学研究所(Institute of Medicine)在其具有里程碑意义的报告《从癌症患者到癌症幸存者:在过渡中迷失》中建议,满足癌症患者需求的服务应不仅涵盖身体健康问题,还应包括癌症的功能和心理社会后果。然而,美国目前没有系统来支持对癌症患者支持服务的可用性进行州级别的数据收集。开发一种系统地收集这些数据并记录服务可用性的机制,对于指导全面癌症控制规划工作至关重要。本研究旨在制定一项在南卡罗来纳州实施对所有美国癌症协会(Commission on Cancer,CoC)认证癌症中心进行全州范围调查的方案,并实施该调查,以检查该州内患者支持服务的可用性。我们对南卡罗来纳州的 CoC 认证癌症中心进行了横断面调查。每个中心的一名管理人员完成了一项关于以下五项服务的可用性的调查:1)患者导航;2)痛苦筛查;3)遗传风险评估和咨询;4)生存护理计划;5)姑息治疗。从 17 个符合条件的中心中,有 16 个中心(94%)提交了完整的调查问卷。在这 16 个中心中,44%的中心报告提供了患者导航服务;31%的中心报告进行了痛苦筛查;44%的中心报告提供了遗传风险评估和咨询服务。超过 85%的中心报告说有一个活跃的姑息治疗项目、姑息治疗提供者和临终关怀项目,但较少的中心有姑息治疗门诊服务(27%)、姑息治疗住院床位(50%)或住院咨询团队(31%)。这是在一个州进行的一项小型但系统的调查。本研究展示了一种成功监测全州范围内癌症患者支持服务可用性的实用方法,包括识别服务差距。