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Effect of Terminology Used to Describe Medical Oncologists on Perceptions of Radiation Oncologists as Equal Partners in Cancer Care

机译:术语用来描述医学肿瘤医学家对辐射肿瘤医学家视为癌症护理的平等伙伴的影响

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PurposeOur purpose was to assess the terminology used to describe the different oncologic subspecialties at academic institutions in the United States and determine whether the use of the term “oncologist” to describe a medical oncologist (MO) may affect the multidisciplinary care of patients with cancer.Methods and MaterialsAn electronic survey was sent to chairs and program directors at all 94 academic radiation oncology departments in the United States. Questions assessed the terminology used to describe the oncologic subspecialties in their hospital’s electronic medical record system, their views on how that terminology may affect referral patterns, and the perception of radiation oncologists’ (ROs) role in patient care.ResultsResponses were received from 40 institutions (response rate, 42.6%). Fifteen percent of hospital electronic medical record systems used the term “oncology” instead of “medical oncology” (51%) or “hematology/oncology” (28%). Describing MOs simply as “oncologists” was thought to more likely affect patient views of MOs as the primary decision maker in their cancer care (mean Likert-type rating, 3.43) than it would affect the probability of up-front multidisciplinary referrals (mean Likert-type rating, 2.69). Patient perceptions of ROs as equal partners in care were thought to be less associated with the terminology used to describe MOs (mean Likert-type rating, 3.15) than the behavior of ROs in patient care (mean Likert-type rating, 4.65;P< .001), the attitude of MOs toward ROs (mean Likert-type rating, 4.59;P< .001), and the involvement of ROs in the initial new patient visits rather than a downstream referral (mean Likert-type rating, 3.95;P< .001).ConclusionsThe terminology used to describe MOs was thought to affect patient and provider perceptions of RO, but less so than other patient-provider interaction factors.
机译:PurposeOur目的是评估用来描述在学术机构的不同的肿瘤学亚专科在美国,并确定使用术语“肿瘤学家”是否来形容一个肿瘤科医生(MO)可能会影响到多学科治疗的癌症患者的术语。方法和MaterialsAn电子调查的所有94学术放射肿瘤学部门在美国被送到椅子和项目主管。问题评估用来描述他们医院的电子病历系统,他们对这一术语可能会如何影响转诊模式的看法肿瘤学亚专业的术语,以及放射肿瘤学家(ROS)患者care.ResultsResponses角色的看法,从40个机构共收到(反应率,42.6%)。医院电子病历系统的百分之十五用的术语“肿瘤学”而不是“医学肿瘤学”(51%)或“血液/肿瘤”(28%)。描述的MO简称为“肿瘤学家”被认为更可能影响作为主要决策者MO的病人意见,他们的癌症护理(平均李克特式评分,3.43)比它会影响的前期多学科转诊的概率(平均李克特型等级,2.69)。的RO如护理平等伙伴的患者知觉被认为与用于描述MOS(平均李克特式等级,3.15)中比在病人护理(ROS平均李克特式评级,4.65行为的术语来较少相关联; P < 0.001),MO的姿势朝向ROS(平均李克特式评级,4.59; P <0.001),和RO的初始新病人就诊而不是下游转诊(平均李克特式等级的参与,3.95; P <.001),用于描述的MO。结论术语被认为影响RO的患者和提供者感知,但比其他患者提供商交互因素少一些。

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