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Psychosocial Care in Oncology

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Emotional distress and mental health for patients and caregivers can greatly impact quality of life, treatment outcomes, and even the cost of care. While progress has been made with distress screening, finding effective and efficient practice solutions to address these needs can tax the care delivery system and contribute to staff stress and burnout.

Delivery of Psychosocial Care in Oncology Summit

To help its membership address access and delivery of psychosocial services, on March 8, 2023 ACCC hosted a multistakeholder summit in partnership with The American Psychosocial Oncology Society (APOS) and The Association of Oncology Social Work (AOSW) focused on psychosocial care delivery in oncology to:

  • Provide a forum for healthcare leaders, cancer care team members, and patient advocates to discuss the current state of mental health in oncology.
  • Build a collaborative dialogue amongst all interested stakeholders to identify action plans that address ongoing mental health issues for patients, caregivers, and cancer care team members.
  • Review and identify effective screening tools, training, resources, and policies to address psychological distress in patients, caregivers, and cancer care professionals.
  • Identify barriers to providing and accessing timely and appropriate care for patients and caregivers experiencing psychological distress.

Download Summit Pre-Reads

Psychosocial Summit Executive SummaryExecutive Summary

Invitees included individuals from across the multidisciplinary psychosocial cancer care team, including key leadership representatives of advocacy organizations, licensed clinical social workers (LCSWs), licensed independent clinical social workers (LICSWs), clinical psychologists, board of oncology certified social workers (OSW-Cs), nurses, advanced practice providers (APPs), and one physician. After a day rich in discussion and interaction, the group came together to identify a series of action items that, if enacted, could create impactful change in the delivery of psychosocial care in oncology.

Download Executive Summary
 

Art Project Showcase: Talk About It

ACCC is proud to showcase this collaborative art project on mental health awareness and psychosocial care in oncology, sponsored by BeiGene, which debuted early this month at the 40th National Oncology Conference in Austin, Texas. Attendees had great fun coloring the mural and interacting with each other on such an important topic.


Cancer Buzz Podcast

More Psychosocial Care in Oncology Resources

From the ACCCBuzz Blog

Geriatric Assessment: One Size Does Not Fit All


May 16, 2019

Spoiler Alert: If you missed this week’s ACCC webinar on “A Review of Validated Tools for Geriatric Assessment and How to Use Them,” this blog post starts with the bottom line takeaway.

Presenter Tanya M. Wildes, MD, cut to the chase in concluding Monday’s webinar: “Let’s agree to stop saying that it [geriatric assessment] is time-consuming!”

Contrary to popular belief, she said, assessments for elderly patients with cancer, do not consume much of a provider’s time. Feasibility studies indicate that an abbreviated geriatric assessment takes about 20 to 25 minutes, of which only 4 to 6 minutes require a provider’s time. Those few minutes are time well-spent, said Dr. Wildes, considering the excessive time providers may have to spend on managing adverse events for older patients who would have responded better to a treatment plan modified for their specific needs. Dr. Wildes is Associate Professor of Medicine at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, Missouri. During the May 13 webinar, she reviewed the development, validation, and utility of the most commonly used geriatric assessment tools.

For the webinar, Dr. Wildes described the differences between geriatric screening tools and geriatric assessments. Both can be used to improve care for senior adult patients. Screening tools can be used to determine whether a patient should be referred for further evaluation; geriatric assessment tools can be used to capture a more comprehensive view of the elderly patient across multiple domains both to refer for needed support services and to determine a patient’s risk for specific negative outcomes.

For elderly patients with cancer, a comprehensive geriatric assessment (GCA) takes into account a series of patient-specific variables—including cognition, function, communication, comorbidities, medications (polypharmacy), social support (both environmental and socioeconomic)—together with toxicity risk calculator tools—to arrive at a risk prediction for potential negative treatment outcomes such as chemotherapy toxicity and early mortality. With this information, said Dr. Wildes, oncologists can more effectively modify cancer treatments and the care team can better understand and address the patient’s supportive care needs.

Dr. Wilde discussed some of the most commonly used validated assessment tools and reviewed current research on their efficacy. Among the most frequently utilized are the CARG Chemo Toxicity Calculator (from the Cancer and Aging Research Group), the CRASH Score Calculator (Chemotherapy Risk Assessment for High Age Patients from the Moffitt Cancer Center), and ePprognosis, an online tool from the University of California San Francisco. Each of these assessments, noted Dr. Wildes, have their respective strengths and weaknesses. Visit the ACCC website for a comprehensive list of geriatric oncology screening and assessment tools and resources.

To address the utility of assessments, Dr. Wildes reviewed a series of published studies that have evaluated the extent to which oncologists modify individual treatment regimens in response to the results of geriatric patient assessments. Among the findings is evidence that providing an oncologist with the results of a senior adult patient’s assessment increases modifications for age-related concerns and improves patient satisfaction with provider communication.

If you missed Dr. Wildes’ webinar or any webinars in ACCC’s series on multidisciplinary approaches to caring for geriatric patients with cancer, you can view them on demand. Join us for the next webinar in the series—Empowering the Multidisciplinary Team to Support Care for Geriatric Oncology Patients—on Tuesday, May 21. All webinars require registration and are free of charge.

 

From Oncology Issues

Our Partners

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In partnership with American Psychosocial Oncology Society and Association of Oncology Social Work.

Our Supporters

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This project was made possible with support from BeiGene, USA.