Abstract

Background. Long-term survivors of childhood malignancy are a newly emergent patient group with a unique but wide range of survivorship issues. There are rising demands for long-term, medical follow-up and social support for this potentially vulnerable group. These demands stem from improving survival rates and the progressively increasing incidence of late physical, psychological and social sequelae. Case-studies and Discussion. The ideal method to facilitate this long-term follow-up is unclear, and faces the problems of health-care system limitations coupled with the paucity of outcomes-based research to guide evidence-based, clinical practice. We discuss how the Late Effects Clinic operates in our institution: optimising the involvement of the multi-disciplinary medical and allied health care teams to meet the physical and psychological needs of long-term survivors, and to assist with the social issues surrounding survivorship. This model involves a co-operative team approach, thereby alleviating the sole responsibility from general practitioners or individual physicians with a restricted realm of expertise. We present three case reports illustrating the value of a formal late effects follow-up programme, and demonstrating the integration of the Late Effects Clinic into medical practice.

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