Presentation Title - Wisconsin Cancer Council

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Transcript Presentation Title - Wisconsin Cancer Council

Survivorship Programs in Wisconsin
as “Pathways to Transition and Roadmaps to Survivorship”
Getting Started
Mindy Gribble RN HN-BC
Survivorship Program Coordinator, Marshfield Clinic
and
Tiffany Marbach RN MSN
Medical College of Wisconsin
Presentation Outline
● Mindy
● Survivorship Care Planning in Wisconsin
● Historical momentum building
● New CDC demographics
● Guidelines and updates
● Input from survivors and their loved ones
● Marshfield Clinic’s WINGS Program; first steps – future plans
● Tiffany
● Starting With Wisdom: What RN’s need to Know
● Evidence–based assessment ; Listening to patients and to providers
● Summary: Partnerships to support Wisconsin Survivors
● “Pathways to Transition” and “Roadmaps to Survivorship.”
● Helpful and Free resources!
●Q&A
National to State; Advocacy Momentum
Definitional Issue: Who is a CANCER SURVIVOR?
●Philosophically, anyone who has been diagnosed with cancer
is a survivor – from the time of diagnosis for the balance of
life – NCCS, CDC (13 million as of April 2011, 20 million by
2020)
●Caregivers and family members are also cancer
“co-survivors” (1:3 or 100 million)
●Term “survivor” is not always a good fit
●Historical similarities to Cardiac Rehabilitation, chronic
disease management models
“The Seasons of Survival”
●Acute Survivorship
● Time of cancer diagnosis and any treatment that may follow
●Transitional Survivorship
● The difficult time when celebration is combined with fear
●Extended Survivorship
● Includes individuals living with cancer as a chronic disease and those in
remission because of ongoing treatment
●Permanent Survivorship “Cancer free, but not worry free”
● 2/3 of survivors return to “new normal”
● 1/3 report continuing physical, psychosocial, or financial consequences
● Most survivors go back to the care of their primary provider
Cure Summer 2009 –
Kenneth Miller MD
Estimated Number of Persons Alive in the U.S. Diagnosed with Cancer
on January 1, 2007 by Site (N = 11.7M)
Cancer Site
Prevalence
Female Breast
2,591,855 (22.1%)
Prostate
2,276,112 (19.4%)
Colorectal
1,112,493 ( 9.5)
Gynecologic
999,450 (8.5%)
Hematologic (HD, NHL,
Leukemia, ALL, Myeloma)
969,295
(7.2%)
Urinary Tract (Bladder,
Kidney, Renal Pelvis)
816,726 (7%)
Melanoma
793,283 (6.8%)
Thyroid
434,256 (3.7%)
Lung
370,617 (3.2%)
Other
1,720,266 (12.6%)
cancercontrol.cancer.gov/ocs/prevale
nce/prevalence_d.html
Estimated Number of Persons Alive in the U.S. Diagnosed with
Cancer on January 1, 2007 by Current Age
(Invasive/1st Primary Cases Only, N = 11.7 M survivors)
Prevalence Count
Age Group
Less than 19 years
106,083
20-39 years
522,000
40-64 years
4,122,070
+65 years
6,963,582
cancercontrol.cancer.gov/ocs/
prevalence/prevalence_d.html
Estimated Number of Persons Alive in the U.S. Diagnosed with
Cancer on January 1, 2007 by Time From Diagnosis and Gender
(Invasive/1st Primary Cases Only, N = 11.7 M survivors)
Male
Female
Time Since Diagnosis
0 to < 5
2,110,305
2,018,434
5 to 10
1,414,018
1,435,608
10 to < 15
900,238
981,164
15 to < 20
446,691
686,528
20 to < 25
221,063
439,583
≥ 25
260,730
799,365
Complete
5,353,054
6,360,682
cancercontrol.cancer.gov/ocs/prevale
nce/prevalence_d.html
Post-Treatment Myths
●For those who’ve experienced cancer:
● I should be celebrating
● I should feel well
● I should be the pre-cancer me
● I should not need support
●For providers seeking to support them
● “One size” Survivorship Programming fits all
“While we don’t want each health system to reinvent the wheel, we do
need to realize that urban and large systems and their programs may
not apply to small cities and rural systems.”
- Participant, 2010 WI Survivorship Forum
Stanton, Ganz et al. Promoting
Adjustment after Treatment for Cancer.
Cancer. 2005:104 (11)2608-2613
IOM Report Recommendation 2
● Patients completing primary treatment
should be provided with a comprehensive
care summary and follow-up plan that is
clearly and effectively explained
●This “Survivorship Care Plan” should be
written by the principal provider(s) who
coordinated oncology treatment
● This service should be reimbursed by
third party payers of health care
Key Elements of Successful Cancer Survivorship Plan “Prevention, Surveillance, Intervention and Coordination”
●
Summary of treatments received
Follow up "care plan“
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Potential late effects, their symptoms and treatment
Recommendations for cancer screening (recurrence or new primary)
Psychosocial effects (including relationships and sexuality/fertility)
Financial issues (work, insurance and employment)
Recommendations for a healthy lifestyle
Genetic counseling (if appropriate)
Effective prevention options
Referrals for follow-up care
List of support resources
WI CC Plan Survivorship Chapter Priority
III: Increase Access to Quality Care and
Services
●Strategy B: Ensure cancer survivors have an individualized
survivor care plan
• Provide information about survivorship care plan templates and
available models to implement survivor care plans on the WI CCC
Program website
• Explore possibility of standardization of key survivorship care plan
elements across the state
Mission – To provide an environment for patients and families that nurtures
healthy survivorship by offering education and resources that maximize
optimal medical care and quality of life from the time of diagnosis through
the balance of life.
•Three Areas of Focus
•Comprehensive Care Summary and Wellness Plan
• Evidence-based education, resources and support
• Collaborations: community, treatment team,
translational research, grant funding opportunities
•Nursing Process: Assess, Plan, Implement, Evaluate
….and begin again…
“Educate providers that there is more to a cancer diagnosis than
a cure” – Participant, 2010 WI Survivorship Forum
Journey Forward was created by a collaboration among:
National Coalition for Cancer Survivorship
UCLA Cancer Survivorship Center
Oncology Nursing Society
WellPoint, Inc.
Genentech
“ONS is a welcome addition to the team,” said Patricia Ganz,
MD, Director of the Survivorship Center at UCLA’s Jonsson
Comprehensive Cancer Center. “Oncology nurses are at the
forefront of preparation of Survivorship Care Plans.”
Survivorship Care Plan Builder 3.0
• Easy-to-use forms that expedite the preparation of treatment
summaries and follow-up care plans
• Helpful, time-saving utilities such as a built-in regimen library,
BSA and BMI calculators, and various checklists
• Support for breast cancer, colon cancer, lymphoma, and other
types of cancer.
• Ability to customize Survivorship Care Plans with your practice
logo
• Ability to expand Care Plans with information on symptoms to
watch for, effects of treatment, support resources, and more
Survivorship Care Plan can be
Printed, Saved, Edited or Emailed
Free at JourneyForward.org
Oncology Issues May/June 2011
“ Barriers to Survivorship Care Plan Implementation”
Barrier:
1. Time Constraints
2. IT issues
Strategies to Overcome:
1. Use tumor registry data, use
available software
2. New HER tools
3. Process and
3. ID Survivor populations on
Responsibilities
4. Care Plan
Recommendations
4. Collaborate with
which to focus for initial
implementation
multidisciplinary team to
establish; NCCN/ ASCO
Survivorship Program Transition Visit
“To be effective consumers, survivors first need to re-negotiate life itself. Live for today.”
– Meg Gaines, 2010 WI Survivorship Forum
• Who?
• What?
• Journey Forward template “plus”
• Practice guidelines, provider checklist, evidence-based
resources
• When?
• Where?
• How long does it take?
• What does it mean to patients? To PCP’s?
Survivorship Care Programs in Wisconsin:
“Pathways to Transition” and “Roadmaps to Survivorship”
Summary
●
Care Plans: Partnerships to improve cancer care
●
Patient input and advocacy is key
● No need to reinvent the wheel
● Nursing processes - plan, implement, evaluate, and begin again
●
Helpful Resources: see WI CCP website
●
NCI Facing Forward series
● NCCS Toolkit
● Care Plan templates
● National guidelines, WI CC Plan 2010-2015, WI Team collaborations