| Literature DB >> 33904117 |
Amye J Tevaarwerk1,2, Xiao Zhang3, James Haine4, Kirsten Norslien5, Mary F Henningfield4, Chelsea Stietz6, David Hahn4, Mary E Sesto4,3.
Abstract
Maintaining the health of survivors requires communication, collaboration and care coordination between oncology and primary care. Primary care clinicians have been acknowledged as important recipients of survivorship care plans (SCPs); however, current SCP templates have not been evaluated for usefulness in the primary care context. We surveyed and interviewed primary care clinicians from a rural research network regarding SCP content, format and layout (phase 1), and potential use and clinical workflows around SCPs (phase 2). Based on these data, an existing SCP template was iteratively redesigned to better support survivorship care in the primary care setting. A total of 13 clinicians (9 MDs, 4 APPs) participated. Interviewees advocated for maintaining a single SCP document shared by survivors and clinicians. Changes to the SCP template included prioritizing follow-up over summary of treatment and removing or down-playing screening recommendations not impacted by cancer or cancer treatment. The re-engineered SCP was regarded as highly relevant for survivors, but clinicians noted the significant effort to "disassemble" SCPs in order to enter the information into on the receiving health record. Primary care clinicians value the information in SCPs but had important recommendations regarding content, layout, and format. Additionally, a significant effort appears to be required by recipients in order to extract SCP information for future use.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer survivorship; Primary care clinician; Primary care information needs; Primary care satisfaction; Survivorship care plans; User-centered care plan
Year: 2021 PMID: 33904117 DOI: 10.1007/s13187-021-02008-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cancer Educ ISSN: 0885-8195 Impact factor: 2.037