4.3 Article

Business as unusual: medical oncology services adapt and deliver during COVID-19

Journal

INTERNAL MEDICINE JOURNAL
Volume 51, Issue 5, Pages 673-681

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/imj.15217

Keywords

COVID-19; pandemics; medical oncology; health services; telehealth

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The impact of COVID-19 on medical oncology care in Australia included fewer hospital admissions, increased telephone consultations, and decreased clinical trial activity. Despite these changes, the continuum of care was largely maintained during the pandemic.
Background The COVID-19 pandemic has challenged cancer care globally, introducing resource limitations and competing risks into clinical practice. Aims To describe the COVID-19 impact on medical oncology care provision in an Australian setting. Methods Calvary Mater Newcastle and Newcastle Private Hospital medical oncology data from 1 February to 31 April 2019 versus 2020 were retrospectively analysed. Results Three hundred and sixty-four inpatient admissions occurred in 2020, 21% less than in 2019. Total inpatient days decreased by 22% (2842 vs 2203). April was most impacted (36% and 44% fewer admissions and inpatient days respectively). Mean length of stay remained unchanged (6.4 vs 6.2 days, P = 0.7). In all, 5072 outpatient consultations were conducted, including 417 new-patient consultations (4% and 6% increase on 2019 respectively). Telephone consultations (0 vs 1380) replaced one-quarter of face-to-face consultations (4859 vs 3623, -25%), with minimal telehealth use (6 vs 69). Day Treatment Centre encounters remained stable (3751 vs 3444, -8%). The proportion of new patients planned for palliative treatment decreased (35% vs 28%, P = 0.04), observation increased (16% vs 23%, P = 0.04) and curative intent treatment was unchanged (both 41%). Recruiting clinical trials decreased by one-third (45 vs 30), two trials were activated (vs 5 in 2019) and 45% fewer patients consented to trial participation (62 vs 34). Conclusion Our medical oncology teams adapted rapidly to COVID-19 with significant changes to care provision, including fewer hospital admissions, a notable transition to telephone-based outpatient clinics and reduced clinical trial activity. The continuum of care was largely defended despite pandemic considerations and growing service volumes.

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