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Accepted for/Published in: JMIR Cancer

Date Submitted: Sep 6, 2018
Date Accepted: Sep 3, 2019
(closed for review but you can still tweet)

The final, peer-reviewed published version of this preprint can be found here:

Evaluation of a Technology-Based Survivor Care Plan for Breast Cancer Survivors: Pre-Post Pilot Study

Laufer T, Lerner B, Petrich A, Quinn AM, Ernst L, Roop A, Knoblauch J, Leasure NC, Jaslow RJ, Hegarty S, Leader A, Barsevick A

Evaluation of a Technology-Based Survivor Care Plan for Breast Cancer Survivors: Pre-Post Pilot Study

JMIR Cancer 2019;5(2):e12090

DOI: 10.2196/12090

PMID: 31859683

PMCID: 6942181

Warning: This is an author submission that is not peer-reviewed or edited. Preprints - unless they show as "accepted" - should not be relied on to guide clinical practice or health-related behavior and should not be reported in news media as established information.

Evaluation of a Technology-Based Survivor Care Plan for Breast Cancer Survivors: Pre-Post Pilot Study

  • Talya Laufer; 
  • Bryan Lerner; 
  • Anett Petrich; 
  • Anna M Quinn; 
  • Leah Ernst; 
  • Alicin Roop; 
  • Janet Knoblauch; 
  • Nick C Leasure; 
  • Rebecca J Jaslow; 
  • Sarah Hegarty; 
  • Amy Leader; 
  • Andrea Barsevick

Background:

As of 2016, almost 16 million individuals were cancer survivors, including over 3.5 million survivors of breast cancer. Because cancer survivors are living longer and have unique health care needs, the Institute of Medicine proposed a survivor care plan as a way to alleviate the many medical, emotional, and care coordination problems of survivors.

Objective:

This pilot study for breast cancer survivors was undertaken to: (1) examine self-reported changes in knowledge, confidence, and activation from before receipt to after receipt of a survivor care plan; and (2) describe survivor preferences for, and satisfaction with, a technology-based survivor care plan.

Methods:

A single group pretest-posttest design was used to study breast cancer survivors in an academic cancer center and a community cancer center during their medical visit after they completed chemotherapy. The intervention was a technology-based survivor care plan. Measures were taken before, immediately after, and 1 month after receipt of the survivor care plan.

Results:

A total of 38 breast cancer survivors agreed to participate in the study. Compared to baseline levels before receipt of the survivor care plan, participants reported increased knowledge both immediately after its receipt at the academic center (P<.001) and the community center (P<.001) as well as one month later at the academic center (P=.002) and the community center (P<.001). Participants also reported increased confidence immediately following receipt of the survivor care plan at the academic center (P=.63) and the community center (P=.003) and one month later at both the academic center (P=.63) and the community center (P<.001). Activation was increased from baseline to post-survivor care plan at both the academic center (P=.05) and community center (P<.001) as well as from baseline to 1-month follow-up at the academic center (P=.56) and the community center (P<.001). Overall, community center participants had lower knowledge, confidence, and activation at baseline compared with academic center participants. Overall, 22/38 (58%) participants chose the fully functional electronic survivor care plan. However, 12/23 (52%) in the community center group chose the paper version compared to 4/15 (27%) in the academic center group. Satisfaction with the format (38/38 participants) and the content (37/38 participants) of the survivor care plan was high for both groups.

Conclusions:

This study provides evidence that knowledge, confidence, and activation of survivors were associated with implementation of the survivor care plan. This research agrees with previous research showing that cancer survivors found the technology-based survivor care plan to be acceptable. More research is needed to determine the optimal approach to survivor care planning to ensure that all cancer survivors can benefit from it.


 Citation

Please cite as:

Laufer T, Lerner B, Petrich A, Quinn AM, Ernst L, Roop A, Knoblauch J, Leasure NC, Jaslow RJ, Hegarty S, Leader A, Barsevick A

Evaluation of a Technology-Based Survivor Care Plan for Breast Cancer Survivors: Pre-Post Pilot Study

JMIR Cancer 2019;5(2):e12090

DOI: 10.2196/12090

PMID: 31859683

PMCID: 6942181

Per the author's request the PDF is not available.