Assessing Patients’ Perceptions of Cancer Care Coordination in a Community-Based Setting

  • Okado I
  • Cassel K
  • Pagano I
  • et al.
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Abstract

Purpose: Effective care coordination (CC) is a hallmark of a high-quality cancer care. However, efforts to improve cancer care delivery are limited by the lack of a clinically useful tool to assess CC. In this study, we examined patients' perceptions of cancer CC using a novel tool, the Care Coordination Instrument (CCI), and evaluated the quality of the CCI.; Methods: The CCI is a 29-item patient questionnaire that assesses CC across varied practice settings and patient populations overall and for three critical domains of CC: communication, navigation, and operational. We conducted univariable and multivariable regression analyses to identify patient clinical and practice characteristics associated with optimal versus suboptimal CC.; Results: Two hundred patients with cancer completed the CCI questionnaire between October 2018 and January 2019, of whom 189 were used for the analysis. The presence of a family caregiver and a diagnosis of a blood cancer were correlated with overall positive reports of CC ( P < .001 and P < .05, respectively). Poorer perceptions of CC were associated with having a head and neck cancer and the absence of family caregiver support. The effects of cancer disease stage and having access to a patient navigator on CC were not statistically significant.; Conclusion: Integrating a patient-centered tool to assess cancer CC can be a strategy to optimize cancer care delivery. Understanding factors associated with effective and ineffective CC can help inform efforts to improve overall quality of care and care delivery.

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APA

Okado, I., Cassel, K., Pagano, I., & Holcombe, R. F. (2020). Assessing Patients’ Perceptions of Cancer Care Coordination in a Community-Based Setting. JCO Oncology Practice, 16(8), e726–e733. https://doi.org/10.1200/jop.19.00509

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