treatment summaries
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2021 ◽  
pp. OP.20.00789
Author(s):  
Jennifer Kue ◽  
Dori L. Klemanski ◽  
Kristine K. Browning

PURPOSE: Treatment Summaries and Survivorship Care Plans (TS/SCPs) may be difficult for patients to comprehend because of readability, magnitude of information, and complex medical verbiage. METHODS: Readability scores were calculated for TS/SCP templates including ASCO, Oncolink, Journey Forward, and the authors' institution. The Simple Measure of Gobbledygook (SMOG) index, Flesch-Kincaid reading grade level, Coleman-Liau Index, and Gunning Fog index were used to assess readability. RESULTS: The Flesch-Kincaid reading ease scores for the blank ASCO templates ranged from 47.4 to 53.3, requiring a reading grade level of 10-12. Coleman-Liau and Gunning Fog scores showed that an 11th grade reading level is essential, and SMOG required a college education to comprehend the ASCO templates. For the colorectal case exemplar, Oncolink's template resulted in the lowest SMOG score (11.3; 11th grade), Flesch-Kincaid reading grade level (11; 11th grade), and Coleman-Liau score (12; 12th grade). Journey Forward's TS/SCP template scored the highest on the SMOG (21.2; college graduate), Flesch-Kincaid reading grade level (18.3; college graduate), and Gunning-Fog index (25.8; college graduate) compared with other TS/SCPs. CONCLUSION: The existing TS/SCP templates used by US cancer centers are written at a grade level beyond the comprehension of most adults. Cancer care teams should assess TS/SCP content for readability and use of plain language and reduce medical jargon.


2021 ◽  
pp. 760-766
Author(s):  
Erin E. Hahn ◽  
Patricia A. Ganz

There are many challenges associated with ensuring quality care for cancer survivors. Cancer patients often require treatment by multiple specialists (surgeons, radiation oncologists, medical oncologists) due to the use of multimodal therapies. After treatment has ended, cancer patients may be at risk for serious long-term and late effects of their disease and treatment. Unfortunately, the oncology care system often fails to provide education and guidance to patients at the end of active cancer treatment, in contrast to the more standardized communication at the time of diagnosis and initial treatment planning. Delivering high-quality, coordinated care during the posttreatment phase is critical to ensure the best possible patient outcomes. One of the proposed first steps in accomplishing this is the widespread implementation of cancer treatment summaries and survivorship care planning, a key recommendation of the 2006 Institute of Medicine report, From Cancer Patient to Cancer Survivor: Lost in Transition. This has been embraced by a number of leading organizations, including the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) and the Commission on Cancer. Survivorship care has also become an international priority, with organizations such as the U.K. National Cancer Survivorship Initiative and Organization of European Cancer Institutes championing the importance of survivorship care. This chapter provides an overview of the development and use of treatment summaries and survivorship care planning and briefly reviews research on care plans and the health policy impact of survivorship care plans as they relate to quality improvement activities that are underway.


2020 ◽  
Vol 22 (Supplement_3) ◽  
pp. iii421-iii421
Author(s):  
Rachel McAndrew ◽  
Bernadine Wilkie ◽  
Mark Brougham ◽  
Jo Phillips

Abstract BACKGROUND Following the Scottish Government Cancer Plan 2012–15(1) ‘End of Treatment’ summaries for paediatric oncology patients treated in SE Scotland have been successfully implemented. However, it became evident that the particular needs of patients with CNS tumours were not adequately captured on the standardised documentation. METHODS In view of these difficulties an alternative document was prepared specifically for this patient cohort by the multi-disciplinary team, including Nurse Specialists, Paediatric Neuro-oncology and Neuro-psychology. This was designed to be a flexible, fluid summary to be used for all such patients regardless of tumour grade or treatment modality and included those undergoing surveillance only. OUTCOMES: The document is primarily completed by the Neuro-Oncology Nurse Specialist alongside the patient and family, usually following initial treatment and is used alongside their holistic needs assessment. The document is circulated to all involved professionals, including Primary Care, and a copy is retained by the patient. This then provides a concise source of information detailing diagnosis and treatment, any specific ongoing sequelae and details of red flag symptoms to alert patients and health professionals to the potential of relapse or other associated significant health problems. These treatment summaries are currently being piloted and have been well received thus far. They will be formally audited in due course with the aim to use nationally throughout Scotland in future.


2020 ◽  
Vol 37 (1) ◽  
pp. 5-13
Author(s):  
Nadia Corsini ◽  
Chantelle C Hislop ◽  
Tracey N Doherty ◽  
Marion C Eckert ◽  
Kate Cameron ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 14 (4) ◽  
pp. 405-416
Author(s):  
Nadia Corsini ◽  
Kim Neylon ◽  
Esther Jie Tian ◽  
Elminur Mahpirof ◽  
Amy McLaughlin ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 37 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. 6605-6605
Author(s):  
Hira Latif ◽  
Maya Beplat ◽  
Prabhjyot Singh ◽  
Asma Ali Dilawari

6605 Background: Cancer and long-term sequalae of its treatment impact the future health and psychosocial wellness of these survivors. ASCO guidelines recommend providing survivorship care to cancer patients who have completed treatment with curative intent. The Commission on Cancer (COC) recommends that survivorship care including treatment summaries be delivered to 50% of eligible patients. In our ASCO Quality Training Program project, we aimed to achieve this COC goal of 50% for the year 2018. Methods: Baseline data collected from Jan 1, 2016 to June 30, 2018 indicated that 33% of hematologic malignancy survivors at WCI received treatment summaries and survivorship care. For the year 2018, there were 11 survivors of hematologic malignancy, and 4 of them (36%) had received survivorship care prior to initiation of the project. We surveyed 12 providers to obtain data for perceived challenges to deliver survivorship care. Large volume of patients, lack of resources, no standardized process and high no-show rates were identified as the most important barriers. A bi-monthly survivorship clinic run by hematology/oncology fellows was initiated in September 2018 to address some of these barriers. Patient referral forms were mounted in the clinic work rooms to assist providers with identifying patients that qualify for survivorship; a pathway for referrals to the survivorship clinic was created and providers were informed about the clinic. Information flyers regarding survivorship care and the clinic were placed in the waiting room to increase awareness amongst patients. Results: By November 30, 2018, 63% of hematological cancer survivors received survivorship care and treatment summaries. Compared to the average from the preceding two years, survivorship care delivery increased by 30%. Conclusions: Our institution was able to meet the COC requirement by delivering survivorship care to 63% of survivors of hematological malignancies through the intervention from this quality improvement study. We intend to extend this process to other tumor types to increase the delivery of consolidated survivorship care at the WCI.


2019 ◽  
Vol 15 (5) ◽  
pp. e467-e474 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tommy Ivanics ◽  
Erica Proctor ◽  
Yalei Chen ◽  
Haythem Ali ◽  
Dawn Severson ◽  
...  

INTRODUCTION: The optimal structure for survivorship care plan (SCP) programs and methodology for generating treatment summaries (TSs) has not yet been defined, but the Commission on Cancer and the National Accreditation Program for Breast Centers both mandate that participating oncology programs implement SCP-TS processes for patients that have completed treatment. METHODS: We used the Institute for Healthcare Improvement’s Plan-Do-Study-Act model for conducting a quality improvement project evaluating two different SCP-TS programs implemented at the Henry Ford Health System/Henry Ford Cancer Institute’s Breast Oncology Program in Detroit, Michigan. System I involved TSs drafted by nonspecialist breast clinic staff; System II involved TSs vetted through a multidisciplinary breast specialist conference approach. Accuracy of basic documentation entries related to dates and components of treatment were compared for the two approaches. RESULTS: Seventy-one System I and 93 System II documents were reviewed. Documentation was accurate in at least 90% of documents for both systems regarding delivery of chemotherapy and/or endocrine therapy and for documenting the identity of the various members of the cancer treatment team. Both systems had notable inaccuracies in documenting type of surgery performed, but System II had fewer inaccuracies than System I (33.78% v 51.67%, respectively; P = .05). System II, compared with System I, had fewer inaccuracies in documenting date of diagnosis (9.68% v 25.35%, respectively; P = .01) and had less missing information for dose of radiation delivered (9.33% v 33.9%, respectively; P < .01). CONCLUSION: A multidisciplinary team approach to drafting and reviewing SCP-TS documents improved content accuracy for our program, but ongoing education regarding documentation of various surgical procedures is warranted.


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