Cancer Survivorship at Stanford Cancer Institute

The Stanford Cancer Survivorship Program is a key initiative of Stanford Cancer Institute. The program’s mission is to improve the experience and outcomes of patients and family caregivers throughout all phases of the cancer trajectory by advancing survivorship research, clinical care, and education...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of cancer survivorship 2024-02, Vol.18 (1), p.53-58
Hauptverfasser: Smith, Stephanie M., Steele, Natasha, Kim, Jennifer, Yurkiewicz, Ilana R., Benedict, Catherine, Trivedi, Ranak, Heathcote, Lauren C., Simon, Pamela J., Bugos, Kelly, Clayton, Alison, Palesh, Oxana, Schapira, Lidia
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container_end_page 58
container_issue 1
container_start_page 53
container_title Journal of cancer survivorship
container_volume 18
creator Smith, Stephanie M.
Steele, Natasha
Kim, Jennifer
Yurkiewicz, Ilana R.
Benedict, Catherine
Trivedi, Ranak
Heathcote, Lauren C.
Simon, Pamela J.
Bugos, Kelly
Clayton, Alison
Palesh, Oxana
Schapira, Lidia
description The Stanford Cancer Survivorship Program is a key initiative of Stanford Cancer Institute. The program’s mission is to improve the experience and outcomes of patients and family caregivers throughout all phases of the cancer trajectory by advancing survivorship research, clinical care, and education. The four pillars of the program include clinical care delivery with a focus on primary care–survivorship collaboration and expanding specialty services, education and training of healthcare professionals, transdisciplinary patient-oriented research, and community engagement. Cross-cutting areas of expertise include the following: (a) adolescents and young adults (AYAs), (b) mental health and patient self-management, (c) integration of primary care, and (d) postgraduate medical education. The clinical care model includes embedded survivorship clinics within disease groups in outpatient clinics, novel clinics designed to address unmet needs such as sexual health for women, and primary care-based faculty-led survivorship clinics for patients undergoing active cancer care requiring co-management, those who have completed active therapy and those at high risk for cancer due to genetic risk. Educational initiatives developed to date include an online course and medical textbook for primary care clinicians, a lecture series, monthly research team meetings, and rotations for medical trainees. Patient-facing activities include webinars and a podcast series designed to promote awareness, thus expanding the provision of expert-vetted information. Ongoing research focuses on oncofertility and family building after cancer, improving communication for AYAs, changing mindsets to improve quality of life through targeted digital interventions, increasing capacity to care for cancer survivors, and strengthening collaboration with community partners. Implications for Cancer Survivors Stanford's Cancer Survivorship Program includes a robust transdisciplinary and interdisciplinary research, training and clinical platform that is committed to advancing access and improving care for people living with and beyond cancer, through innovation in design and care delivery.
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subjects Adolescent
Adolescents
Cancer
Cancer Survivors
Caregivers
Collaboration
Community involvement
Community participation
Cross cutting
Delivery of Health Care
Education
Female
Health care
Health Informatics
Health Promotion and Disease Prevention
Humans
Interdisciplinary research
Interdisciplinary studies
Medicine
Medicine & Public Health
Neoplasms - therapy
Oncology
Patients
Primary care
Primary Care Medicine
Public Health
Quality of life
Quality of Life - psychology
Quality of Life Research
Sexual health
Survival
Survivorship
Training
Young Adult
Young adults
title Cancer Survivorship at Stanford Cancer Institute
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