| Literature DB >> 35459202 |
Michael Kusch1, Hildegard Labouvie2, Vera Schiewer2, Natalie Talalaev2, Jan C Cwik3, Sonja Bussmann3, Lusine Vaganian3, Alexander L Gerlach3, Antje Dresen4, Natalia Cecon4, Sandra Salm4, Theresia Krieger4, Holger Pfaff5, Clarissa Lemmen6, Lisa Derendorf6, Stephanie Stock6, Christina Samel7, Anna Hagemeier7, Martin Hellmich7, Bernd Leicher8, Gregor Hültenschmidt8, Jessica Swoboda8, Peter Haas8, Anna Arning9, Andrea Göttel9, Kathrin Schwickerath9, Ullrich Graeven9, Stefanie Houwaart10, Hedy Kerek-Bodden10, Steffen Krebs2, Christiana Muth2, Christina Hecker11, Marcel Reiser12, Cornelia Mauch2, Jennifer Benner13, Gerdamarie Schmidt13, Christiane Karlowsky13, Gisela Vimalanandan13, Lukas Matyschik14, Lars Galonska14, Annette Francke14, Karin Osborne15, Ursula Nestle15, Markus Bäumer15, Kordula Schmitz15, Jürgen Wolf2, Michael Hallek2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The annual incidence of new cancer cases has been increasing worldwide for many years, and is likely to continue to rise. In Germany, the number of new cancer cases is expected to increase by 20% until 2030. Half of all cancer patients experience significant emotional and psychosocial distress along the continuum of their disease, treatment, and aftercare, and also as long-term survivors. Consequently, in many countries, psycho-oncological programs have been developed to address this added burden at both the individual and population level. These programs promote the active engagement of patients in their cancer therapy, aftercare and survivorship planning and aim to improve the patients' quality of life. In Germany, the "new form of care isPO" ("nFC-isPO"; integrated, cross-sectoral psycho-oncology/integrierte, sektorenübergreifende Psycho-Onkologie) is currently being developed, implemented and evaluated. This approach strives to accomplish the goals devised in the National Cancer Plan by providing psycho-oncological care to all cancer patients according to their individual healthcare needs. The term "new form of care" is defined by the Innovation Fund (IF) of Germany's Federal Joint Committee as "a structured and legally binding cooperation between different professional groups and/or institutions in medical and non-medical care". The nFC-isPO is part of the isPO project funded by the IF. It is implemented in four local cancer centres and is currently undergoing a continuous quality improvement process. As part of the isPO project the nFC-isPO is being evaluated by an independent institution: the Institute for Medical Sociology, Health Services Research, and Rehabilitation Science (IMVR), University of Cologne, Germany. The four-year isPO project was selected by the IF to be eligible for funding because it meets the requirements of the federal government's National Cancer Plan (NCP), in particular, the "further development of the oncological care structures and quality assurance" in the psycho-oncological domain. An independent evaluation is required by the IF to verify if the new form of care leads to an improvement in cross-sectoral care and to explore its potential for permanent integration into the German health care system.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer; Complex intervention; Dissemination; Implementation; Practice-based research; Psycho-oncology; Quality improvement; Stepped-care
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35459202 PMCID: PMC9034572 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-022-07782-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.908
Fig. 1Components and features of the new form of care isPO. (references to the program theory according to Issel [66] are shown in brackets)
Fig. 4Features of the isPO care program. *The allocation criteria are described in chapter: patient allocation and follow up within the isPO care program. (HADS, Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) [64]; PSR, Psychosocial Risk Questionnaire (German: Psychosozialer Risikofragebogen; PSR) [65])
Description of the core services and core processes of the isPO care program
| Empowerment of patients to actively participate in their cancer therapy and aftercare while maintaining the highest possible quality of life | ||||
step 0 / all enrolled patients | up to 20 | coordination | Coordination and organization (care and case management: scheduling, correspondence, meetings, reporting, quality assurance, service accounting etc. at patient and organizational level) Contact person for disease-related and/or treatment-related psychosocial questions in the cancer continuum, especially for patients who are not treated at levels 2 and 3 | |
| intake | Ensuring the first contact with the patient shortly after the medical referral, in-depth information and enrolment of the patient | |||
| assessment | Collection of all necessary information (among other things implementation of the screening) at intake | |||
| planning/linking | Documentation of test results in CAPSYS-docu and assignment of the patient to the care providers according to the automated criteria-based data evaluation within CAPSYS-docu (see Fig. | |||
| monitoring | Monitoring of the path-guided course of care using CAPSYS-assist, information from the treating physicians as well as the patients on the screening results by means of automatically generated CAPSYS-reports, documentation for service billing, contact person for patients and the service provider team on organizational questions | |||
| re-/evaluation | Data collection and documentation in CAPSYS-docu on T2 (4th month of treatment) and T3 (12th month, end of treatment); information from the treating physicians as well as the patients on the screening results by means of automatically generated CAPSYS reports | |||
step 1 / all enrolled patients | up to two | orient | Provision of information and explanations to promote patient self-help resources by a trained volunteering person previously ill with cancer | |
| inform | Information on community-based psychosocial support services, contacts to non-profit self-help groups, services offered by statutory health insurance companies and internet addresses of non-profit cancer societies and other independent and evidence-based sources of information and support, including the delivery of written information material to the patient | |||
| explain | Provision of patient information on the basis of a self-commitment declaration signed by the trained person (in particular: empathetic and sympathetic attitude, listening to the patient, no medical or therapy-related or legal advice, restraint should the patient request personal advice, not holding their own medical history as a standard, complying with the head of the psycho-oncological care unit) | |||
| agree | Documentation on whether the patient agrees to having experienced the information received as helpful | |||
| document | Assessment of the personally felt quality of the information meeting with indication of a possible further need for care on the part of the patient (note: the documentation in CAPSYS-docu is done by a case manager) | |||
step 2 / HADS-G ≥ 15/ PSR ≤ 3 | up to six | orient | Accompaniment of the patient during their cancer disease and cancer therapy with the aim of improving their individual skills in coping with symptoms and treatment, as well as their short and longer-term physical and psychosocial consequences, including the life changes necessary to live with the protracted disease | |
| assessment | Assessment of the severity of the patient’s psychosocial problems, based on the results of a questionnaire and a half-structured interview and creation of a psychosocial self-help plan | |||
| advice | Consultation on necessary care needs based on the psychosocial self-help plan and preparation of a priority list of psychosocial care needs | |||
| agree | Joint prioritization of the psychosocial issues that need to be dealt with first | |||
| assist | Determination of the professional support needs of a patient based on the assessed severity of the problem Low need of support: the patient receives information or advice on how to independently carry out the interventions defined in the help plan High need of support: The patient is actively supported and guided by the psychosocial expert or the service provider implements aspects of the help plan for instead of with the patient | |||
| arrange | Accompanying support of the patient in the implementation of their self-help goals (e.g. internet research, discussions with treating physicians or other persons, provision of documents for applications to authorities) | |||
step 3a / HADS-G ≥ 15 | up to 14 | orient | Accompaniment of the patient during their cancer disease and cancer therapy with the aim of the following: reduction of psychological burden; emotional stabilization; improvement of self-management in coping with acute physical symptoms, treatment related or acute states of emotional dysregulation; coping with the short and longer-term physical and psychological consequences of cancer, including the life changes necessary for living with a protracted disease | |
| diagnose | Assessment and classification of the severity of the patient's psychological burdens based on the results of the screening assessment at intake and an initial psycho-oncological examination. In particular, specification of the nature and severity of the emotional distress or mental disorder on the basis of available information | |||
| indicate | Selection of a suitable psychotherapeutic intervention for the current problem of a patient. In the continuum of a bio-medical cancer therapy, psychotherapeutic diagnostic and therapeutic decisions may repeatedly become necessary. In the care area on step 3a/3b CAPSYS-assist offers decision support for finding a possible indication based on questionnaire data, anamnesis data, protocol data etc | |||
| intervene | Selection and implementation of one of 25 treatment modules described in the isPO manual for the care areas at step 3a/b | |||
| evaluate | Continuous evaluation of the achievement of psychotherapeutic goals | |||
step 3b / HADS-G ≥ 15/ PSR ≥ 6 | up to 14 as in step 3a and up to 4 as in step 2 | orientate | Accompaniment of the patient during their cancer disease and cancer therapy as in 3a Psycho-oncological treatment as in care area of step 3a; psychosocial care as in care area of step 2, following a regulation by the psychotherapist | |
aThe allocation criteria are described in the paragraph: patient allocation and follow up within the isPO care program
Abbreviations: HADS Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) [64] PSR Psychosocial Risk questionnaire (German: Psychosozialer Risikofragebogen) [65]
Fig. 3Features of the care concept of the isPO care program according to Issel [66]
Fig. 2Clinical selection/execution recommendations for care area step 0: 5.1 Process of initial access to isPO-care
Fig. 5Care pathway algorithm of the contract for “special care” according to § 140a SCB-V of the German Social Code Book V for statutory health insurance funds. Legend: HADS; Hospital Anxiety and Depressions Scale [64]; PSR, Psychosocial Risk Questionnaire (German: Psychosozialer Risikofragebogen; PSR [65]); T1, assessment at entry into the isPO care program; T2 assessment within the 4th month of service provision; T3 assessment at the end of psycho-oncological care (12th month after program entry); allocation criteria (see chapter: patient allocation and follow up within the isPO care program).