Mattes Malcolm D, White Zachary, Golden Daniel W, Vapiwala Neha, Herman Joseph M, Royce Trevor J
Department of Radiation Oncology, Rutgers Cancer Institute of New Jersey, New Brunswick, New Jersey.
University of South Alabama College of Medicine, Mobile, Alabama.
Adv Radiat Oncol. 2020 Sep 16;6(1):100560. doi: 10.1016/j.adro.2020.09.001. eCollection 2021 Jan-Feb.
Our purpose was to assess the terminology used to describe the different oncologic subspecialties at academic institutions in the United States and determine whether the use of the term "oncologist" to describe a medical oncologist (MO) may affect the multidisciplinary care of patients with cancer.
An electronic survey was sent to chairs and program directors at all 94 academic radiation oncology departments in the United States. Questions assessed the terminology used to describe the oncologic subspecialties in their hospital's electronic medical record system, their views on how that terminology may affect referral patterns, and the perception of radiation oncologists' (ROs) role in patient care.
Responses were received from 40 institutions (response rate, 42.6%). Fifteen percent of hospital electronic medical record systems used the term "oncology" instead of "medical oncology" (51%) or "hematology/oncology" (28%). Describing MOs simply as "oncologists" was thought to more likely affect patient views of MOs as the primary decision maker in their cancer care (mean Likert-type rating, 3.43) than it would affect the probability of up-front multidisciplinary referrals (mean Likert-type rating, 2.69). Patient perceptions of ROs as equal partners in care were thought to be less associated with the terminology used to describe MOs (mean Likert-type rating, 3.15) than the behavior of ROs in patient care (mean Likert-type rating, 4.65; < .001), the attitude of MOs toward ROs (mean Likert-type rating, 4.59; < .001), and the involvement of ROs in the initial new patient visits rather than a downstream referral (mean Likert-type rating, 3.95; < .001).
The terminology used to describe MOs was thought to affect patient and provider perceptions of RO, but less so than other patient-provider interaction factors.
我们的目的是评估美国学术机构中用于描述不同肿瘤学亚专业的术语,并确定使用“肿瘤学家”一词来描述医学肿瘤学家(MO)是否会影响癌症患者的多学科护理。
向美国所有94个学术放射肿瘤学部门的主任和项目主任发送了电子调查问卷。问题评估了用于描述其医院电子病历系统中肿瘤学亚专业的术语、他们对该术语可能如何影响转诊模式的看法,以及放射肿瘤学家(RO)在患者护理中的作用认知。
收到了40家机构的回复(回复率为42.6%)。15%的医院电子病历系统使用“肿瘤学”一词,而不是“医学肿瘤学”(51%)或“血液学/肿瘤学”(28%)。将MO简单描述为“肿瘤学家”,被认为更有可能影响患者将MO视为其癌症护理主要决策者的看法(李克特量表平均评分,3.43),而不是影响 upfront 多学科转诊的可能性(李克特量表平均评分,2.69)。与RO在患者护理中的行为(李克特量表平均评分,4.65;P <.001)、MO对RO的态度(李克特量表平均评分,4.59;P <.001)以及RO参与新患者初次就诊而非下游转诊(李克特量表平均评分,3.95;P <.001)相比,患者将RO视为护理平等伙伴的认知被认为与用于描述MO的术语关联较小(李克特量表平均评分,3.15)。
用于描述MO的术语被认为会影响患者和提供者对RO的认知,但程度低于其他患者 - 提供者互动因素。