Abstract

236 Background: Maintaining health and well-being is a primary goal throughout the cancer experience. The dynamic nature of a survivor’s trajectory makes it difficult to tailor education and supportive care services to their actual needs. We sought to determine information and education needs preferred by survivors who had returned to their communities after completing their treatment. Methods: We partnered with survivors' advocacy groups to conduct a needs assessment with adult survivors attending a community survivorship conference. Once eligibility was confirmed, verbal consent was obtained, and instructions were given on survey completion. A modified version of the NCI Follow-Up Care Use among Survivors survey was used. Analyses focused on clinical/sociodemographic characteristics, preferences for follow-up care, information/education needs, and sources for receiving health information. Simple descriptives were used to report the results. Results: We distributed 284 questionnaires and 169 were returned, yielding a 59.5% response rate. Respondents were mostly female (79.9%), married (58.6%), college educated (81.7%) and had ver 10 post-treatment years (47.3%). 51.3% were diagnosed with breast cancer and 81.8% reported being in good to excellent health. 57.3% had follow-up cancer care, 30.8% did not recall having a discussion with their provider about late-effects, and 57.6% reported not receiving a summary care plan. 83.7% preferred to have the same provider follow them and 95.2% reported their oncologist would be their ideal doctor. Survivors preferred more information on ways to improve memory/concentration (83.9%), energy/exercise (83.3%), and maximizing the benefits of their survivorship care plan (74.6%). Preferred information sources were health care providers (78.0%) and the internet (39.3%). Conclusions: These survivors reported a high level of unmet information needs related to self-management of physical symptoms. Patient-provider communication about late-effects and benefits of survivorship care plans continues to be inadequate. Physicians and other providers are in ideal positions to initiate conversations about supportive survivorship care early in the patient experience.

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