Author:
Rowe Arlen,Crawford-Williams Fiona,Goodwin Belinda. C,Myers Larry,Stiller Anna,Dunn Jeff,Aitken Joanne. F,March Sonja
Abstract
Abstract
Purpose
The purpose of the study was to investigate the amount and type of survivorship care information received by cancer survivors living in rural Australia and whether this varies according to demographic factors or cancer type.
Methods
Self-reported receipt of a survivorship care plan (SCP) and information on various aspects of survivorship care (e.g., managing side effects, healthy lifestyles, psychosocial advice and monitoring for recurrence) were collected from 215 cancer survivors who had returned home to a rural area in Queensland Australia after receiving cancer treatment in a major city within the previous 5 years (72% in the previous 12 months). Logistic regression was used to assess for differences across demographic factors and cancer type.
Results
Only 35% of participants reported receiving a SCP and proportions of those reporting the receipt of specific information varied from 74% for information on short-term side effects to less than 30% for information on finances, chemoprevention and monitoring for signs of recurrence. No significant differences were found in the receipt of survivorship care information across demographic factors or cancer type.
Conclusions
Findings suggest that cancer survivors living in rural areas are not consistently provided with adequate survivorship care information, particularly that pertaining to long-term health and recovery.
Implications for Cancer Survivors
Without improved systems for delivering survivorship care information to patients returning home to rural communities after treatment, these cancer survivors risk missing out on necessary information and advice to maintain their health, wellbeing and long-term recovery.
Funder
University of Southern Queensland
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Oncology (nursing),Oncology
Reference33 articles.
1. Nekhlyudov L, Mollica MA, Jacobsen PB, Mayer DK, Shulman LN, Geiger AM. Developing a quality of cancer survivorship care framework: implications for clinical care, research, and policy. JNCI: Journal of the National Cancer Institute. 2019;111(11):1120–30.
2. Cancer Australia. Principles of cancer survivorship. Australian Government;
3. Hewitt M, Ganz P. From cancer patient to cancer survivor: lost in transition. Institute of Medicine; 2005.
4. McGrath P. Overcoming the distance barrier in relation to treatment for haematology patients: Queensland findings. Aust Health Rev. 2015;39(3):344–50.
5. Watts KJ, Good LH, McKiernan S, Miller L, O’Connor M, Kane R, et al. “Undressing” distress among cancer patients living in urban, regional, and remote locations in Western Australia. Support Care Cancer. 2016;24(5):1963–73.
Cited by
12 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献