Characterizing the Traveling Oncology Workforce and Its Influence on Patient Travel Burden: A Claims-Based Approach

Author:

Scodari Bruno T.1ORCID,Schaefer Andrew P.2,Kapadia Nirav S.234ORCID,O'Malley A. James123ORCID,Brooks Gabriel A.234ORCID,Tosteson Anna N.A.234ORCID,Onega Tracy5ORCID,Wang Changzhen6ORCID,Wang Fahui7ORCID,Moen Erika L.123ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biomedical Data Science, Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth, Lebanon, NH

2. The Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice, Lebanon, NH

3. Dartmouth Cancer Center, Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center, Lebanon, NH

4. Department of Medicine, Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth, Lebanon, NH

5. Department of Population Health Sciences and Huntsman Cancer Institute, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT

6. Department of Geography and the Environment, The University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, AL

7. Department of Geography and Anthropology, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, LA

Abstract

PURPOSE Oncology outreach is a common strategy for extending cancer care to rural patients. However, a nationwide characterization of the traveling workforce that enables this outreach is lacking, and the extent to which outreach reduces travel burden for rural patients is unknown. METHODS This cross-sectional study analyzed a rural (nonurban) subset of a 100% fee-for-service sample of 355,139 Medicare beneficiaries with incident breast, colorectal, and lung cancers. Surgical, medical, and radiation oncologists were linked to patients using Part B claims, and traveling oncologists were identified by observing hospital service area (HSA) transition patterns. We defined oncology outreach as the provision of cancer care by a traveling oncologist outside of their primary HSA. We used hierarchical gamma regression models to examine the separate associations between patient receipt of oncology outreach and one-way patient travel times to chemotherapy, radiotherapy, and surgery. RESULTS On average, 9,935 of 39,960 oncologists conducted annual outreach, where 57.8% traveled with low frequency (0-1 outreach visits/mo), 21.1% with medium frequency (1-3 outreach visits/mo), and 21.1% with high frequency (>3 outreach visits/mo). Oncologists provided surgery, radiotherapy, and chemotherapy to 51,715, 27,120, and 5,874 rural beneficiaries, respectively, of whom 2.5%, 6.9%, and 3.6% received oncology outreach. Rural patients who received oncology outreach traveled 16% (95% CI, 11 to 21) and 11% (95% CI, 9 to 13) less minutes to chemotherapy and radiotherapy than those who did not receive oncology outreach, corresponding to expected one-way savings of 15.9 (95% CI, 15.5 to 16.4) and 11.9 (95% CI, 11.7 to 12.2) minutes, respectively. CONCLUSION Our study introduces a novel claims-based approach for tracking the nationwide traveling oncology workforce and supports oncology outreach as an effective means for improving rural access to cancer care.

Publisher

American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)

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