TY - JOUR
T1 - Optimizing cancer survivorship in primary care
T2 - patient experiences from the Johns Hopkins Primary Care for Cancer Survivors clinic
AU - Choi, Youngjee
AU - Parrillo, Elaina
AU - Wenzel, Jennifer
AU - Grabinski, Victoria F.
AU - Kabani, Aamna
AU - Peairs, Kimberly S.
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported by the Merck Foundation (grant number N022890).
Funding Information:
Drs. Youngjee Choi, Kimberly Peairs, and Jennifer Wenzel have received salary support from the Merck Foundation grant. The other authors declare they have no conflict of interest.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.
PY - 2023/10
Y1 - 2023/10
N2 - Purpose: The optimal delivery of survivorship care, particularly within primary care, remains poorly understood. We established the Johns Hopkins Primary Care for Cancer Survivors (PCCS) clinic in 2015 to address care challenges unique to cancer survivors. To better understand the care from the PCCS clinic, we interviewed patients about their perception of care delivery, survivorship care, and care coordination. Methods: We conducted semi-structured interviews with adult survivors of any cancer type seen in the PCCS clinic. A priori and in vivo coding of verbatim transcripts was part of the thematic analysis. Results: Seventeen cancer survivors were interviewed (ages 37–78). Themes that emerged were (1) optimal care and (2) the PCCS experience. Subthemes respectively included the ideal role of the primary care provider (1), telehealth/COVID-19 challenges and opportunities (1), patient-derived value from the PCCS clinic (2), and improving the PCCS model (2). Overall, PCCS patients expected and experienced high-quality, comprehensive primary care by providers with cancer survivorship expertise. Patients reported telehealth benefits and challenges for survivorship care during the COVID-19 pandemic. Conclusions: PCCS patients perceived receiving high-quality primary care and valued being seen in a primary care–based survivorship clinic. The PCCS clinic can serve as a model of primary care–based cancer survivorship. Implications for Cancer Survivors: Ideal primary care provider roles and care coordination are important factors for high-quality survivorship care and can be provided by a specialized cancer survivorship clinic in primary care.
AB - Purpose: The optimal delivery of survivorship care, particularly within primary care, remains poorly understood. We established the Johns Hopkins Primary Care for Cancer Survivors (PCCS) clinic in 2015 to address care challenges unique to cancer survivors. To better understand the care from the PCCS clinic, we interviewed patients about their perception of care delivery, survivorship care, and care coordination. Methods: We conducted semi-structured interviews with adult survivors of any cancer type seen in the PCCS clinic. A priori and in vivo coding of verbatim transcripts was part of the thematic analysis. Results: Seventeen cancer survivors were interviewed (ages 37–78). Themes that emerged were (1) optimal care and (2) the PCCS experience. Subthemes respectively included the ideal role of the primary care provider (1), telehealth/COVID-19 challenges and opportunities (1), patient-derived value from the PCCS clinic (2), and improving the PCCS model (2). Overall, PCCS patients expected and experienced high-quality, comprehensive primary care by providers with cancer survivorship expertise. Patients reported telehealth benefits and challenges for survivorship care during the COVID-19 pandemic. Conclusions: PCCS patients perceived receiving high-quality primary care and valued being seen in a primary care–based survivorship clinic. The PCCS clinic can serve as a model of primary care–based cancer survivorship. Implications for Cancer Survivors: Ideal primary care provider roles and care coordination are important factors for high-quality survivorship care and can be provided by a specialized cancer survivorship clinic in primary care.
KW - Cancer survivorship
KW - Care coordination
KW - Primary care
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U2 - 10.1007/s11764-022-01166-3
DO - 10.1007/s11764-022-01166-3
M3 - Article
C2 - 35025092
AN - SCOPUS:85123119398
SN - 1932-2259
VL - 17
SP - 1286
EP - 1294
JO - Journal of Cancer Survivorship
JF - Journal of Cancer Survivorship
IS - 5
ER -