Scodari Bruno T, Schaefer Andrew P, Kapadia Nirav S, Brooks Gabriel A, O'Malley A James, Moen Erika L
Department of Biomedical Data Science, Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth, Lebanon, NH, USA.
The Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice, Lebanon, NH, USA.
Ann Surg Oncol. 2024 Jul;31(7):4349-4360. doi: 10.1245/s10434-024-15195-y. Epub 2024 Mar 27.
Oncology outreach is a common strategy for increasing rural access to cancer care, where traveling oncologists commute across healthcare settings to extend specialized care. Examining the extent to which physician outreach is associated with timely treatment for rural patients is critical for informing outreach strategies.
We identified a 100% fee-for-service sample of incident breast cancer patients from 2015 to 2020 Medicare claims and apportioned them into surgery and adjuvant therapy cohorts based on treatment history. We defined an outreach visit as the provision of care by a traveling oncologist at a clinic outside of their primary hospital service area. We used hierarchical logistic regression to examine the associations between patient receipt of preoperative care at an outreach visit (preoperative outreach) and > 60-day surgical delay, and patient receipt of postoperative care at an outreach visit (postoperative outreach) and > 60-day adjuvant delay.
We identified 30,337 rural-residing patients who received breast cancer surgery, of whom 4071 (13.4%) experienced surgical delay. Among surgical patients, 14,501 received adjuvant therapy, of whom 2943 (20.3%) experienced adjuvant delay. In adjusted analysis, we found that patient receipt of preoperative outreach was associated with reduced odds of surgical delay (odds ratio [OR] 0.75, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.61-0.91); however, we found no association between patient receipt of postoperative outreach and adjuvant delay (OR 1.04, 95% CI 0.85-1.25).
Our findings indicate that preoperative outreach is protective against surgical delay. The traveling oncologists who enable such outreach may play an integral role in catalyzing the coordination and timeliness of patient-centered care.
肿瘤外展服务是增加农村地区癌症治疗可及性的常用策略,即肿瘤医生穿梭于不同医疗机构,提供专科护理。研究医生外展服务与农村患者及时治疗之间的关联程度,对于制定外展策略至关重要。
我们从2015年至2020年医疗保险理赔数据中,选取了100%按服务收费的新发乳腺癌患者样本,并根据治疗史将其分为手术组和辅助治疗组。我们将外展诊疗定义为流动肿瘤医生在其主要医院服务区以外的诊所提供护理服务。我们采用分层逻辑回归分析,研究患者在外展诊疗中接受术前护理(术前外展)与手术延迟超过60天之间的关联,以及患者在外展诊疗中接受术后护理(术后外展)与辅助治疗延迟超过60天之间的关联。
我们确定了30337名接受乳腺癌手术的农村患者,其中4071名(13.4%)经历了手术延迟。在接受手术的患者中,14501名接受了辅助治疗,其中2943名(20.3%)经历了辅助治疗延迟。在调整分析中,我们发现患者接受术前外展与手术延迟几率降低相关(比值比[OR]为0.75,95%置信区间[CI]为0.61 - 0.91);然而,我们发现患者接受术后外展与辅助治疗延迟之间没有关联(OR为1.04,95% CI为0.85 - 1.25)。
我们的研究结果表明,术前外展可预防手术延迟。开展此类外展服务的流动肿瘤医生可能在促进以患者为中心的护理协调和及时性方面发挥不可或缺的作用。