Martin Joanna L, Azizoddin Desiree R, Rynar Lauren Z, Weber Jane, Oliver Tyra, Weldon Christine B, Hauser Joshua M
and are Palliative Care Physicians; is a Palliative Care Nurse Practitioner; and is a Palliative Care and Hematology Oncology Clinical Social Worker; all at Jesse Brown VA Medical Center in Chicago, Illinois. is Adjunct Faculty in Hematology and Oncology; Joanna Martin is a Health System Clinician; and Joshua Hauser is a Palliative Care Physician; all at Northwestern Feinberg School of Medicine in Illinois. Christine Weldon is Director at the Center for Business Models in Healthcare in Illinois. is a Research Scientist at Brigham and Women's Hospital and Affiliate Research Faculty, Department of Psychosocial Oncology and Palliative Care, Dana Farber Cancer Institute, and Harvard Medical School, in Massachusetts. is an Assistant Professor, Supportive Oncology at Rush University Medical Center in Chicago.
Fed Pract. 2021 Aug;38(Suppl 3):S28-S35. doi: 10.12788/fp.0158.
Veterans who live with cancer need comprehensive care. The National Comprehensive Cancer Network and the American College of Surgeons Commission on Cancer guidelines recommend evaluating distress and providing appropriate follow-up to all patients with cancer.
We created patient-centered, collaborative clinics to screen for and address cancer-related distress. Medical oncologists received education about available supportive services and instructions on how to make referrals. Participants completed the Coleman Supportive Oncology Collaborative screening questions.
Patients in this outpatient US Department of Veterans Affairs medical oncology clinic were primarily older, African American men. Most veterans screened positive for ≥ 1 type of cancer-related distress. Patients screened for high levels of distress received in-person clinical follow-up for further evaluation and to make immediate referrals to supportive care services.
We evaluated patients' needs, made referrals as needed, and helped bring care directly into the oncology clinic. Using a screening tool for cancer-related distress and managing distress with integrated psychosocial providers could improve care coordination and enhance patient-centered supportive oncology care, especially for high-risk patients. A full-time social worker was integrated into the medical oncology clinics based on our program's success.
罹患癌症的退伍军人需要全面护理。美国国立综合癌症网络和美国外科医师学会癌症委员会指南建议对所有癌症患者评估痛苦程度并提供适当的后续跟进。
我们设立了以患者为中心的协作诊所,以筛查和处理与癌症相关的痛苦。肿瘤内科医生接受了关于现有支持性服务的教育以及如何进行转诊的指导。参与者完成了科尔曼支持性肿瘤协作筛查问题。
这家美国退伍军人事务部门诊肿瘤内科诊所的患者主要是老年非裔美国男性。大多数退伍军人筛查出≥1种与癌症相关的痛苦呈阳性。筛查出高度痛苦的患者接受了面对面的临床随访,以进行进一步评估并立即转诊至支持性护理服务。
我们评估了患者的需求,按需进行转诊,并帮助将护理直接引入肿瘤内科诊所。使用与癌症相关痛苦的筛查工具并通过综合心理社会服务提供者来管理痛苦,可以改善护理协调并加强以患者为中心的支持性肿瘤护理,尤其是对于高危患者。基于我们项目的成功,一名全职社会工作者被纳入了肿瘤内科诊所。