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Use of scheduled and unscheduled health services by cancer survivors and their caregivers. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to identify factors that influence health service usage among cancer survivors and their caregivers during treatment.
  • The research involved 380 pairs of cancer survivors and their caregivers, analyzing self-reported health service usage and how it relates to social determinants of health.
  • Key findings indicated that the number of comorbid conditions and education level significantly affected scheduled care use, while younger age and health insurance availability led to higher unscheduled care usage, suggesting targeted educational initiatives for younger individuals could improve health service optimization.

Article Abstract

Purpose: The purpose was to determine predictors of scheduled and unscheduled health services use by cancer survivors undergoing treatment and their informal caregivers.

Methods: English- or Spanish-speaking adult cancer survivors undergoing chemotherapy or targeted therapy for a solid tumor cancer identified a caregiver (N = 380 dyads). Health services use over 2 months was self-reported by survivors and caregivers. Logistic regression models were used to relate the likelihood of service use (hospitalizations, emergency department [ED] or urgent care visits, primary care, specialty care) to social determinants of health (age, sex, ethnicity, level of education, availability of health insurance), and number of comorbid conditions. Co-habitation with the other member of the dyad and other member's health services use were considered as additional explanatory variables.

Results: Number of comorbid conditions was predictive of the likelihood of scheduled health services use, both primary care and specialty care among caregivers, and primary care among survivors. Greater probability of specialty care use was associated with a higher level of education among survivors. Younger age and availability of health insurance were associated with greater unscheduled health services use (hospitalizations among survivors and urgent care or ED visits among caregivers). Unscheduled health services use of one member of the dyad was predictive of use by the other.

Conclusions: These findings inform efforts to optimize health care use by encouraging greater use of scheduled and less use of unscheduled health services. These educational efforts need to be directed especially at younger survivors and caregivers.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10396393PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00520-022-07157-5DOI Listing

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