A. P. Ortiz, M. Rivera, S. García-Camacho, W. Calo, G. Tortolero-Luna, S. Umpierre, I. Daluz-Santana, Pablo Mendez
{"title":"Abstract LB-157: Impact of hurricane-related stressors and responses on oncology care and outcomes of women with gynecologic cancer in Puerto Rico","authors":"A. P. Ortiz, M. Rivera, S. García-Camacho, W. Calo, G. Tortolero-Luna, S. Umpierre, I. Daluz-Santana, Pablo Mendez","doi":"10.1158/1538-7445.AM2019-LB-157","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Objective: Cancer patients have increased risk of poor outcomes after disasters. On September 2017 Hurricanes Irma and Maria affected Puerto Rico (PR) and US Virgin Islands, causing the population to experience major disruptions in essential services and environmental health issues. Using qualitative methods, this ongoing study documents the stressors, responses, and experiences of patients, and providers/organizations involved in the receipt and delivery of gynecologic oncology care in PR, respectively. Methods: We conducted two focus groups (November-December 2018) among women ≥21 years with gynecologic cancer (n=12) and eight key-informant interviews among providers/stakeholders who offer services to these population in PR. Patients’ interviews addressed psychosocial and environmental stressors and multi-level responses experienced by the women in the aftermath of the hurricanes, and concerns regarding their condition. Key-informants’ interviews addressed problems encountered in their clinics/organizations in the aftermath of the hurricanes, perceived stressors and risks of patients, and recommendations for future preparedness efforts. Sessions were audio-recorded and transcribed to identify emergent themes. Results: The focus groups evidence that all patients faced lasting difficulties having a healthy diet and with communication, electricity and water services. Women under the Government Health Plan (GHP) faced longer time without essential services and were less prepared for the hurricanes than those with private health insurance. None received disaster preparedness information from their clinics/physicians and all expressed feeling environmental stressors such as heat, mosquitoes, humidity, noise and air pollution produced by household electric generators. All patients experienced delay in cancer treatment, but women in the GHP had longer delays, as most public hospitals were saturated or inoperable. Key-informants expressed that clinics/organizations did not have an emergency plan in place, services were saturated because the collapse of many facilities, and that some patients decided to interrupt their treatments, and others experienced recurrence. The biggest obstacle was lack of effective communication between the government and the health services, calling for interdependence of systems, but with better communication. Conclusion: Study results are guiding the topics that will be assessed in the subsequent quantitative phase of this NCI sponsored project, and the development of a disaster management plan for cancer patients in PR. Results show that all components of disaster management (planning, preparedness, response and recovery) failed. Disparities in preparedness and healthcare interruption in patients in the GHP could affect patient outcomes. NCI Grant #R21CA239457. Citation Format: Ana P. Ortiz, Mirza Rivera, Sandra I. Garcia-Camacho, William Calo, Guillermo Tortolero-Luna, Sharee Umpierre, Istoni Daluz-Santana, Pablo Mendez. Impact of hurricane-related stressors and responses on oncology care and outcomes of women with gynecologic cancer in Puerto Rico [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2019; 2019 Mar 29-Apr 3; Atlanta, GA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2019;79(13 Suppl):Abstract nr LB-157.","PeriodicalId":21579,"journal":{"name":"Science and Health Policy","volume":"100 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2019-07-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"2","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Science and Health Policy","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1158/1538-7445.AM2019-LB-157","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 2
Abstract
Objective: Cancer patients have increased risk of poor outcomes after disasters. On September 2017 Hurricanes Irma and Maria affected Puerto Rico (PR) and US Virgin Islands, causing the population to experience major disruptions in essential services and environmental health issues. Using qualitative methods, this ongoing study documents the stressors, responses, and experiences of patients, and providers/organizations involved in the receipt and delivery of gynecologic oncology care in PR, respectively. Methods: We conducted two focus groups (November-December 2018) among women ≥21 years with gynecologic cancer (n=12) and eight key-informant interviews among providers/stakeholders who offer services to these population in PR. Patients’ interviews addressed psychosocial and environmental stressors and multi-level responses experienced by the women in the aftermath of the hurricanes, and concerns regarding their condition. Key-informants’ interviews addressed problems encountered in their clinics/organizations in the aftermath of the hurricanes, perceived stressors and risks of patients, and recommendations for future preparedness efforts. Sessions were audio-recorded and transcribed to identify emergent themes. Results: The focus groups evidence that all patients faced lasting difficulties having a healthy diet and with communication, electricity and water services. Women under the Government Health Plan (GHP) faced longer time without essential services and were less prepared for the hurricanes than those with private health insurance. None received disaster preparedness information from their clinics/physicians and all expressed feeling environmental stressors such as heat, mosquitoes, humidity, noise and air pollution produced by household electric generators. All patients experienced delay in cancer treatment, but women in the GHP had longer delays, as most public hospitals were saturated or inoperable. Key-informants expressed that clinics/organizations did not have an emergency plan in place, services were saturated because the collapse of many facilities, and that some patients decided to interrupt their treatments, and others experienced recurrence. The biggest obstacle was lack of effective communication between the government and the health services, calling for interdependence of systems, but with better communication. Conclusion: Study results are guiding the topics that will be assessed in the subsequent quantitative phase of this NCI sponsored project, and the development of a disaster management plan for cancer patients in PR. Results show that all components of disaster management (planning, preparedness, response and recovery) failed. Disparities in preparedness and healthcare interruption in patients in the GHP could affect patient outcomes. NCI Grant #R21CA239457. Citation Format: Ana P. Ortiz, Mirza Rivera, Sandra I. Garcia-Camacho, William Calo, Guillermo Tortolero-Luna, Sharee Umpierre, Istoni Daluz-Santana, Pablo Mendez. Impact of hurricane-related stressors and responses on oncology care and outcomes of women with gynecologic cancer in Puerto Rico [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2019; 2019 Mar 29-Apr 3; Atlanta, GA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2019;79(13 Suppl):Abstract nr LB-157.
目的:灾后癌症患者预后不良的风险增加。2017年9月,飓风“厄玛”和“玛丽亚”影响了波多黎各和美属维尔京群岛,造成基本服务严重中断,并引发环境健康问题。本研究采用定性方法,分别记录了PR中涉及妇科肿瘤护理接收和交付的患者和提供者/组织的压力源、反应和经验。方法:我们在≥21岁的妇科癌症女性中(n=12)进行了两个焦点小组(2018年11月至12月),并在PR中为这些人群提供服务的提供者/利益相关者中进行了8次关键信息访谈。患者访谈涉及飓风后女性经历的社会心理和环境压力因素以及多层次反应,以及对其状况的担忧。关键线人的访谈涉及了他们的诊所/组织在飓风过后遇到的问题,感知到的压力源和患者的风险,以及对未来准备工作的建议。会议录音和文字记录,以确定紧急主题。结果:焦点小组的证据表明,所有患者在健康饮食和通信、电力和水服务方面都面临着持久的困难。参加政府保健计划的妇女得不到基本服务的时间更长,对飓风的准备也比参加私人健康保险的妇女少。没有人从诊所/医生那里得到备灾信息,所有人都表示感受到环境压力,如热、蚊子、湿度、噪音和家用发电机产生的空气污染。所有患者都经历了癌症治疗的延迟,但由于大多数公立医院已饱和或无法手术,在GHP中的妇女延迟时间更长。关键信息提供者表示,诊所/组织没有应急计划,由于许多设施倒塌,服务已经饱和,一些患者决定中断治疗,还有一些患者复发。最大的障碍是政府和卫生服务机构之间缺乏有效的沟通,这要求系统相互依赖,但要有更好的沟通。结论:研究结果指导了NCI赞助项目后续定量阶段的评估主题,以及PR中癌症患者灾害管理计划的制定。结果表明,灾害管理的所有组成部分(规划、准备、响应和恢复)都失败了。在GHP中,患者在准备和医疗中断方面的差异可能会影响患者的预后。NCI授权号R21CA239457。引文格式:Ana P. Ortiz, Mirza Rivera, Sandra I. Garcia-Camacho, William Calo, Guillermo Tortolero-Luna, Sharee Umpierre, Istoni Daluz-Santana, Pablo Mendez。飓风相关应激源和反应对波多黎各妇科癌症妇女肿瘤护理和预后的影响[摘要]。摘自:2019年美国癌症研究协会年会论文集;2019年3月29日至4月3日;亚特兰大,乔治亚州。费城(PA): AACR;癌症杂志2019;79(13增刊):摘要nr LB-157。