Survivorship care for cancer patients [electronic resource] : a clinician's handbook / Stefan Rauh, editor.

This book is a valuable source for oncologists and all other physicians dealing with cancer survivors. It provides detailed information on the evidence-based benefits and forms of intervention, with contributions by a highly prestigious and well recognized panel of experts. Chapters deal with all fe...

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Bibliographic Details
Online Access: Full Text (via Springer)
Other Authors: Rauh, Stefan (Editor)
Format: Electronic eBook
Language:English
Published: Cham, Switzerland : Springer, 2021.
Subjects:
Table of Contents:
  • Intro
  • Acknowledgements
  • Introduction
  • Contents
  • 1: Definition of Survivorship Care
  • Definition of Survivorship Care
  • Evolution of Term in Pubmed
  • Brief History
  • Definitions
  • Seasons of Survival Revisited
  • Categories of Patients with and Survivors of Cancer Category Description
  • Shades of Survivorship Describes Three Categories
  • ESMO and European Cancer Patient Coalition Categories of Cancer Survivors (Who Are all Post-Treatment)
  • Evidence-Based Survivorship Care Interventions
  • Survivorship Care Plan
  • Oncologist Versus Primary Care Provider.
  • Models of Cancer Survivorship Health Care
  • Quality of Cancer Survivorship Care Framework
  • Cancer and its Treatment
  • General Health Care and Prevention
  • Health Care Delivery
  • Evidence Gaps and Research Priorities
  • Surveillance for Recurrence and New Cancers
  • Management of Long-Term and Late Physical Effects
  • Management of Long-Term and Late Psychosocial Effects
  • Health Promotion
  • Care Coordination
  • Financial Hardship
  • Cross-Cutting Needs
  • Conclusion
  • References
  • 2: Goals of Survivorship Care
  • Cancer Survivorship Care
  • Domains of Cancer Survivorship Care.
  • Cancer Survivorship Care Plan and Rehabilitation Targets
  • Cancer Survivorship Care Plan
  • Rehabilitation Targets
  • The Different Needs for Survivorship Care
  • The Impact of National Disparities on Survivorship Care
  • The Cancer Stigma and Cancer Advocacy
  • Concluding Remarks
  • References
  • 3: "There is Life after Cancer": The Medical, Psychological, Social and Financial Challenges of Cancer Survivors at the End of the Active Treatment
  • Introduction
  • Life after Cancer and the Notion of the Quality of Life
  • Improving the Medical Dimension of Survivorship Care.
  • The Psychological aspects of Survivorship Cancer Care
  • The Impacts of Cancer in the Socioeconomic Lives of Cancer Survivors
  • Return to Work after Cancer
  • Access to Financial Instruments and the Right to Be Forgotten
  • Conclusion
  • References
  • 4: Follow-Up and Long-Term Follow-Up of Cancer Patients: Who is in Charge, why, when, and how...: Introduction: The Evolution from "Surveillance" to "Survivorship Care"
  • References
  • 5: Models of Long-Term Follow-up for Cancer Patients: From Children to Adults, from Simple to Multi-Modal
  • References.
  • 6: Who Should Be in Charge of Survivorship Care?
  • What Does Survivorship Care Mean?
  • Who Fares Better?-Perceptions of Oncologists, Primary Care Physicians, and Patients
  • Medical Oncologists' Perception of FU
  • Primary Care Providers'(PCPs') Perception of FU
  • Patients' Perception of FU
  • Who Fares Better? Evidence
  • Survival Benefit According to the Chosen FU Model
  • Progression Free Survival and Early Detection of Recurrence
  • Other Endpoints
  • Current/Existing Models of Survivorship Care
  • Shared Models
  • Shared Models with Risk-Stratified Individualized Survivorship Follow-Up.