- Ke, Yu;
- Tan, Yung Ying;
- Neo, Patricia Soek Hui;
- Yang, Grace Meijuan;
- Loh, Kiley Wei-Jen;
- Ho, Shirlynn;
- Tan, Yee Pin;
- Ramalingam, Mothi Babu;
- Quah, Daniel Song Chiek;
- Chew, Lita;
- Si, Phebe En Hui;
- Tay, Beng Choo;
- Chan, Alexandre
Introduction
Supportive care models considering inclusivity and community services to improve integrated care for cancer survivors are limited. In this case study, we described the implementation of a multidisciplinary care model employing routine distress screening and embedded integrated care pathways to integrate care across disciplines and care sectors, while remaining inclusive of the multi-ethnic and multilingual population in Singapore. We reported implementation outcomes after 18 months of implementation.Description
We reviewed the model's process indicators from September 2019 to February 2021 at the largest public ambulatory cancer centre. Outcomes assessed included penetration, fidelity to screening protocol, and feasibility in three aspects - inclusiveness of different ethnic and language groups, responsiveness to survivors reporting high distress, and types of community service referrals.Discussion/conclusion
We elucidated opportunities to promote access to community services and inclusivity. Integration of community services from tertiary settings should be systematic through mutually beneficial educational and outreach initiatives, complemented by their inclusion in integrated care pathways to encourage systematic referrals and care coordination. A hybrid approach to service delivery is crucial in ensuring inclusivity while providing flexibility towards external changes such as the COVID-19 pandemic. Future work should explore using telehealth to bolster inclusiveness and advance community care integration.