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Medical Care Disruptions During the First Six-Months of the COVID19 Pandemic: The Experience of Older Breast Cancer Survivors.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Dilawari, A; Rentscher, KE; Zhai, W; Zhou, X; Ahles, TA; Ahn, J; Bethea, TN; Carroll, JE; Cohen, HJ; Graham, DA; Jim, H; McDonald, B ...
Published in: Res Sq
April 14, 2021

UNLABELLED: PurposeOlder cancer survivors required medical care during the COVID-19 pandemic despite infection risks, but there are limited data on medical care in this age group. METHODS: We evaluated care disruptions in a longitudinal cohort of non-metastatic breast cancer survivors ages 60-98 from five US regions (n=321). Survivors completed a web-based or telephone survey from May 27, 2020 to September 11, 2020. Care disruptions included self-reported interruptions in ability to see doctors, receive treatment or supportive therapies, or fill prescriptions. Logistic regression models evaluated bivariate and multivariate associations between care disruptions and education, medical, psychosocial and COVID-19-related factors. Multivariate models included age, county COVID-19 rates, comorbidity and post-diagnosis time. RESULTS: There was a high response rate (n=262, 81.6%). Survivors were 32.2 months post-diagnosis (SD 17.5, range 4-73). Nearly half (48%) reported a medical disruption. The unadjusted odds of care disruptions were significantly higher with more education (OR 1.23 per one-year increase, 95% CI 1.09-1.39, p =0.001) and greater depression (OR 1.04 per one-point increase in CES-D score, CI 1.003-1.08, p=0.033); tangible support decreased the odds of disruptions (OR 0.99, 95% CI 0.97-0.99 per one-point increase, p=0.012). There was a trend for associations between disruptions and comorbidity (unadjusted OR 1.13 per 1 added comorbidity, 95% CI 0.99-1.29, p=0.07). Adjusting for covariates, only higher education (p=0.001) and tangible social support (p=0.006) remained significantly associated with having care disruptions. CONCLUSIONS: Older breast cancer survivors reported high rates of medical care disruptions during the COVID-19 pandemic and psychosocial factors were associated with care disruptions.

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Res Sq

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April 14, 2021

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United States
 

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Dilawari, A., Rentscher, K. E., Zhai, W., Zhou, X., Ahles, T. A., Ahn, J., … Thinking and Living with Cancer Study, . (2021). Medical Care Disruptions During the First Six-Months of the COVID19 Pandemic: The Experience of Older Breast Cancer Survivors. Res Sq. https://doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-416077/v1
Dilawari, A., K. E. Rentscher, W. Zhai, X. Zhou, T. A. Ahles, J. Ahn, T. N. Bethea, et al. “Medical Care Disruptions During the First Six-Months of the COVID19 Pandemic: The Experience of Older Breast Cancer Survivors.Res Sq, April 14, 2021. https://doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-416077/v1.
Dilawari A, Rentscher KE, Zhai W, Zhou X, Ahles TA, Ahn J, et al. Medical Care Disruptions During the First Six-Months of the COVID19 Pandemic: The Experience of Older Breast Cancer Survivors. Res Sq. 2021 Apr 14;
Dilawari, A., et al. “Medical Care Disruptions During the First Six-Months of the COVID19 Pandemic: The Experience of Older Breast Cancer Survivors.Res Sq, Apr. 2021. Pubmed, doi:10.21203/rs.3.rs-416077/v1.
Dilawari A, Rentscher KE, Zhai W, Zhou X, Ahles TA, Ahn J, Bethea TN, Carroll JE, Cohen HJ, Graham DA, Jim H, McDonald B, Nakamura ZM, Patel SK, Root JC, Small BJ, Saykin AJ, Tometich D, Van Dyk K, Mandelblatt JS, Thinking and Living with Cancer Study. Medical Care Disruptions During the First Six-Months of the COVID19 Pandemic: The Experience of Older Breast Cancer Survivors. Res Sq. 2021 Apr 14;

Published In

Res Sq

DOI

Publication Date

April 14, 2021

Location

United States