Abstract

Although a majority of underinsured and uninsured patients with cancer have multiple comorbidities, many lack consistent connections with a primary care team to manage chronic conditions during and after cancer treatment. This presents a major challenge to delivering high-quality comprehensive and coordinated care. To describe challenges and opportunities for coordinating care in an integrated safety-net system for patients with both cancer and other chronic conditions. This multimodal qualitative study was conducted from May 2016 to July 2019 at a county-funded, vertically integrated safety-net health system including ambulatory oncology, urgent care, primary care, and specialty care. Participants were 93 health system stakeholders (clinicians, leaders, clinical, and administrative staff) strategically and snowball sampled for semistructured interviews and observation during meetings and daily processes of care. Data collection and analysis were conducted iteratively using a grounded theory approach, followed by systematic thematic analysis to organize data, review, and interpret comprehensive findings. Data were analyzed from March 2019 to March 2020. Multilevel factors associated with experiences of coordinating care for patients with cancer and chronic conditions among oncology and primary care stakeholders. Among interviews and observation of 93 health system stakeholders, system-level factors identified as being associated with care coordination included challenges to accessing primary care, lack of communication between oncology and primary care clinicians, and leadership awareness of care coordination challenges. Clinician-level factors included unclear role delineation and lack of clinician knowledge and preparedness to manage the effects of cancer and chronic conditions. Primary care may play a critical role in delivering coordinated care for patients with cancer and chronic diseases. This study's findings suggest a need for care delivery strategies that bridge oncology and primary care by enhancing communication, better delineating roles and responsibilities across care teams, and improving clinician knowledge and preparedness to care for patients with cancer and chronic conditions. Expanding timely access to primary care is also key, albeit challenging in resource-limited safety-net settings.

Highlights

  • Care delivery for cancer survivors with cooccurring chronic conditions[1] is changing rapidly

  • Primary care may play a critical role in delivering coordinated care for patients with cancer and chronic diseases

  • This study’s findings suggest a need for care delivery strategies that bridge oncology and primary care by enhancing communication, better delineating roles and responsibilities across care teams, and improving clinician knowledge and preparedness to care for patients with cancer and chronic conditions

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Summary

Introduction

Care delivery for cancer survivors with cooccurring chronic conditions[1] is changing rapidly. Models for comprehensive management of patients with cancer and comorbidities are still evolving.[9,10,11] To date, most cancer care management efforts have focused within oncology on increasing coordination between cancer treatment modalities (ie, chemotherapy, radiation, and surgery).[12,13,14] Efforts to develop and test new survivorship care delivery models have been recommended for the growing number of cancer patients with multiple chronic conditions for whom coordination is especially lacking.[15,16,17]

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