Piloting a Survivorship Screening Tool in a Specialty Clinic for Survivors of Childhood Cancers

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Abstract

We piloted a patient-reported screener in a clinic for survivors of childhood cancers to facilitate detection of late effects, psychosocial needs, and distress. The mean number of patient-reported survivorship concerns endorsed per patient was 3.2; most frequent were difficulties with body weight, sleep, work/school, and fertility. Few individuals reported clinically significant distress or fear of recurrence. Electronic health record data produced an average of 2.3 late effects. Administration of a brief screener was effective in identifying additional current medical and psychosocial care needs among adult survivors of childhood cancers in a survivorship clinic.

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Fisher, A. P., Wortman, K., Kinahan, K., Kircher, S. M., Penedo, F. J., Weldon, C., … Garcia, S. F. (2020). Piloting a Survivorship Screening Tool in a Specialty Clinic for Survivors of Childhood Cancers. Journal of Adolescent and Young Adult Oncology, 9(3), 418–421. https://doi.org/10.1089/jayao.2019.0079

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