4.4 Article

Risk-Stratified Pathways for Cancer Survivorship Care: Insights from a Deliberative Multi-Stakeholder Consultation

Journal

CURRENT ONCOLOGY
Volume 28, Issue 5, Pages 3408-3419

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/curroncol28050295

Keywords

risk stratification; survivorship care; deliberative consultation; multi-stakeholder; care coordination

Categories

Funding

  1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research [MP-04-2019-263]
  2. University of Sherbrooke Research Chair on improving the quality and safety of care for people with cancer

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Risk-stratified pathways of survivorship care aim to enhance coordination between cancer specialists and primary care physicians based on individual needs, but face challenges due to lack of clarity on risk stratification, uncertainties around model expectations, and health system structures hindering communication.
Risk-stratified pathways of survivorship care seek to optimize coordination between cancer specialists and primary care physicians based on the whole person needs of the individual. While the principle is supported by leading cancer institutions, translating knowledge to practice confronts a lack of clarity about the meaning of risk stratification, uncertainties around the expectations the model holds for different actors, and health system structures that impede communication and coordination across the care continuum. These barriers must be better understood and addressed to pave the way for future implementation. Recognizing that an innovation is more likely to be adopted when user experience is incorporated into the planning process, a deliberative consultation was held as a preliminary step to developing a pilot project of risk-stratified pathways for patients transitioning from specialized oncology teams to primary care providers. This article presents findings from the deliberative consultation that sought to understand the perspectives of cancer specialists, primary care physicians, oncology nurses, allied professionals, cancer survivors and researchers regarding the following questions: what does a risk stratified model of cancer survivorship care mean to care providers and users? What are the prerequisites for translating risk stratification into practice? What challenges are involved in establishing these prerequisites? The multi-stakeholder consultation provides empirical data to guide actions that support the development of risk-stratified pathways to coordinate survivorship care.

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