Caring for Alaska Native prostate cancer survivors in primary care: a survey of Alaska Tribal Health System providers.


Autoria(s): Tilburt, JC; Kelley, S; DeCourtney, CA; Humeniuk, KM; Latini, J; Kim, SP
Data(s)

2014

Identificador

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24596707

23637

Int J Circumpolar Health, 2014, 73 pp. 23637 - ?

http://hdl.handle.net/10161/9379

2242-3982

Relação

Int J Circumpolar Health

10.3402/ijch.v73.23637

Palavras-Chave #Alaska Native #cancer survivorship #prostate cancer #Aged #Alaska #Continuity of Patient Care #Delivery of Health Care #Health Care Surveys #Humans #Logistic Models #Male #Middle Aged #Outcome Assessment (Health Care) #Pilot Projects #Population Groups #Primary Health Care #Program Evaluation #Prostatic Neoplasms #Risk Assessment #Surveys and Questionnaires #Survivors
Tipo

Journal Article

Cobertura

Sweden

Resumo

BACKGROUND: Little is known about the constraints of optimizing health care for prostate cancer survivors in Alaska primary care. OBJECTIVE: To describe the experiences and attitudes of primary care providers within the Alaska Tribal Health System (ATHS) regarding the care of prostate cancer survivors. DESIGN: In late October 2011, we emailed a 22-item electronic survey to 268 ATHS primary care providers regarding the frequency of Prostate Specific Antigen (PSA) monitoring for a hypothetical prostate cancer survivor; who should be responsible for the patient's life-long prostate cancer surveillance; who should support the patient's emotional and medical needs as a survivor; and providers' level of comfort addressing recurrence monitoring, erectile dysfunction, urinary incontinence, androgen deprivation therapy, and emotional needs. We used simple logistic regression to examine the association between provider characteristics and their responses to the survivorship survey items. RESULTS: Of 221 individuals who were successfully contacted, a total of 114 responded (52% response rate). Most ATHS providers indicated they would order a PSA test every 12 months (69%) and believed that, ideally, the hypothetical patient's primary care provider should be responsible for his life-long prostate cancer surveillance (60%). Most providers reported feeling either "moderately" or "very" comfortable addressing topics such as prostate cancer recurrence (59%), erectile dysfunction (64%), urinary incontinence (63%), and emotional needs (61%) with prostate cancer survivors. These results varied somewhat by provider characteristics including female sex, years in practice, and the number of prostate cancer survivors seen in their practice. CONCLUSIONS: These data suggest that most primary care providers in Alaska are poised to assume the care of prostate cancer survivors locally. However, we also found that large minorities of providers do not feel confident in their ability to manage common issues in prostate cancer survivorship, implying that continued access to specialists with more expert knowledge would be beneficial.

Formato

23637 - ?

Idioma(s)

ENG