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Nearly 70% of people living with cancer are "complex patients" with multiple chronic conditions who must deal not only with effects of their cancer but also continuing diseases such as diabetes, depression, hypertension, or heart disease. Care coordination strategies shown to be effective in improving outcomes for common medical conditions seen in primary care include: systematic transitions for patients to and from specialty care; intensive case management; and a team-based approach to comprehensive care. Despite an Institute of Medicine report suggesting these strategies as potential ways to improve care for cancer survivors, their implementation has not yet been evaluated for cancer survivors. Parkland Health and Hospital Systems will be implementing care coordinator strategies as part of as quality assurance/quality improvement activities, which Aim 2 and Aim 3 (research components) will evaluate. This protocol has been organized to reflect this distinction between the aims. The investigators expect no more than 1500 patients to be included in these study aims.
Full description
This project is a pragmatic trial. The investigators propose a quasi-experimental design where data will be collected both pre- and post-intervention on distinct cross-sections of patients with one or more highly prevalent ambulatory-sensitive chronic conditions (diabetes, hypertension, chronic lung disease, chronic kidney disease, depression, or heart disease) and newly diagnosed with breast, colorectal, or gynecologic cancers (complex cancer survivors) in the Parkland Health & Hospital system (Dallas, TX).
Guided by the "Primary Care Change Model", Parkland will implement evidence-based care coordination strategies to improve care for complex cancer survivors in this integrated safety-net system as a part of quality assurance/quality improvement activities (Aim 1), then this study will comprehensively evaluate how these strategies are implemented in the safety-net setting (Aim 3), and whether implementing these strategies improves care coordination and care outcomes (Aim 2) within the Parkland Health and Hospital System. Investigators expect approximately 1000 new survivors with ≥ 1 prevalent chronic condition to be eligible. The project does not include patients diagnosed with in situ and metastatic disease (Stages 0 and IV) due to insufficient evidence for routine follow-up and management; many of the latter continue indefinitely on active treatment for symptom management. The chronic conditions selected for inclusion are the most prevalent conditions cancer survivors have at Parkland as well as nationally.
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4,322 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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