## Abstract ## __Background.__ The management of patients with head and neck cancer is complex, and implementation of an integrated care program might improve the quality of care. ## __Methods.__ A prospective before–after study was performed in 1 clinic for head and neck oncology on 311 adults
Quality of integrated care for patients with nonsmall cell lung cancer : Variations and Determinants of Care
✍ Scribed by Mariëlle M. M. T. J. Ouwens; Rosella R. P. M. G. Hermens; René A. R. Termeer; Saskia Y. Vonk-Okhuijsen; Vivianne C. G. Tjan-Heijnen; Ad F. T. M. Verhagen; Marlies M. E. J. L. Hulscher; Henri A. M. Marres; Hub C. H. Wollersheim; Richard P. T. M. Grol
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2007
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 106 KB
- Volume
- 110
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0008-543X
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✦ Synopsis
Abstract
BACKGROUND.
In the current study, the authors focused on determinants influencing the quality of care and variations in the actual quality of integrated care for patients with nonsmall cell lung cancer (NSCLC) to estimate whether there is room for improvement.
METHODS.
The authors tested the quality of integrated care for 276 NSCLC patients with 14 quality indicators of professional (4 indicators), organizational (3 indicators), and patient‐oriented quality (7 indicators). Patient characteristics and actual care data were derived from medical record data, patient‐oriented care was derived from patient questionnaires, and professional and hospital characteristics were derived from questionnaires for professionals. The performance measure was the proportion of patients to whom the indicator applied who had positive scores on the indicator. Multilevel logistic regression analysis determined the influence of patient, professional, and hospital characteristics on care.
RESULTS.
With regard to professional quality, the proportions of patients who underwent fluorodeoxyglucose–positron emission tomography or cervical mediastinoscopy according to the guideline criteria were 88% and 84%, respectively. Only 50% of the biopsies were adequately obtained during mediastinoscopy, and in 3% of the patients with clinical stage III disease (based on the TNM classification) there was a search for brain metastases before the initiation of combination therapy. With regard to organizational quality, the diagnostic route of 79% of the patients was completed within 21 days; 51% of patients began therapy within 35 days and 57% were discussed during multidisciplinary consultation. All but 1 patient‐oriented quality indicator scored ≤58%. Hospitals varied by ≥20% with regard to 11 of the 14 indicators. The patient‐related determinants “stage of disease,” “age,” and “comorbidity” were found to influence the indicator scores the most.
CONCLUSIONS.
The quality of integrated care (especially patient‐oriented care) for NSCLC patients needs improvement. Patient characteristics appear to influence performance more than professional or hospital characteristics. Cancer 2007. © 2007 American Cancer Society.
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