4.7 Article

Patient and Caregiver Considerations and Priorities When Selecting Hospitals for Complex Cancer Care

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ANNALS OF SURGICAL ONCOLOGY
卷 28, 期 8, 页码 4183-4192

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SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1245/s10434-020-09506-2

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  1. National Cancer Institute of the National Institute of Health [F32CA217455]

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This study explored how patients and caregivers select hospitals for complex cancer care and identified six broad domains that characterized hospital selection considerations, including hospital factors, team characteristics, travel distance, referral or recommendation, continuity of care, and insurance considerations. The study found that participants at different types of medical centers had similar considerations but with some differences, such as access to clinical trials for participants at metropolitan centers and insurance considerations for participants at urban/suburban centers.
Background. Healthcare policies have focused on centralizing care to high-volume centers in an effort to optimize patient outcomes; however, little is known about patients' and caregivers' considerations and selection process when selecting hospitals for care. We aim to explore how patients and caregivers select hospitals for complex cancer care and to develop a taxonomy for their selection considerations. Methods. This was a qualitative study in which data were gathered from in-depth interviews conducted from March to November 2019 among patients with hepatopancreatobiliary cancers who were scheduled to undergo a pancreatectomy (n = 20) at a metropolitan, urban regional, or suburban medical center and their caregivers (n = 10). Results. The interviews revealed six broad domains that characterized hospital selection considerations: hospital factors, team characteristics, travel distance to hospital, referral or recommendation, continuity of care, and insurance considerations. The identified domains were similar between participants seen at the metropolitan center and urban/suburban medical centers, with the following exceptions: participants receiving care specifically at the metropolitan center noted operative volume and access to specific services such as clinical trials in their hospital selection; participants receiving care at urban/suburban centers noted health insurance considerations and having access to existing medical records in their hospital selection. Conclusions. This study delineates the many considerations of patients and caregivers when selecting hospitals for complex cancer care. These identified domains should be incorporated into the development and implementation of centralization policies to help increase patient access to high-quality cancer care that is consistent with their priorities and needs.

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