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Rural Oncology Update

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Title: Rural Oncology Update


1
Rural Oncology Update
  • Dorothy Keefe
  • TCCSA Professor of Cancer Medicine, University of
    Adelaide
  • Clinical Director RAH Cancer Centre
  • Deputy Chair SA Cancer Network
  • Chair MBBS Curriculum Committee (Operations)

2
What am I going to talk about?
  • The Statewide Cancer Network
  • Education
  • Clinical Challenges in Rural Oncology

3
Ideal Cancer Care
  • We all know that the aim is to provide
  • Worlds best evidence-based, patient-centred
    cancer care for all
  • Whatever the location
  • Rural or Metropolitan
  • Whatever the financial status
  • Public/Private
  • Whatever the cultural or linguistic background
  • Aboriginal, CALD

4
South Australian Issues
  • City State
  • Small and distant rural population
  • No Oncologists outside Metropolitan Adelaide
  • Vast distances
  • Tiny rural towns and Cities
  • Small Population
  • Just over 1.5 million people
  • 75 live in metropolitan area
  • Ageing (highest median age in Aus)

5
Workforce
  • Problems with attraction and retention
  • Lower remuneration
  • Limited career options
  • Low morale
  • Competition from other states for staff
  • Staff also Ageing
  • Succession planning inadequate

6
State Health
  • State too small to have duplicate services
  • Inter-hospital rivalries
  • State-wide cancer control plan launched but not
    implemented
  • Funding required
  • Cancer Registry run-down
  • IT infrastructure inadequate

7
What do we have already?
  • Statewide Cancer Control Plan 2006-2009
  • Launched but not implemented
  • Statewide Cancer Network
  • Just getting going
  • South Australias Health Care Plan
  • The new hospital
  • ABHI
  • Cancer Australia CanNet project
  • Rural Chemotherapy Mentoring Program

8
ABHI
  • Australian Better Health Initiative
  • Funding for several cancer care coordinators
  • 1 in Southern
  • 2 in CNAHS
  • 1 in CYWHS
  • Activities aligned with Cancer Network and CanNet

9
CanNet
  • Cancer Service Networks National Demonstration
    Program
  • DoH has been awarded 1m as a CanNet grant which
    is being used to fund the development of a South
    Australian Cancer Network

10
Rural Chemotherapy Mentoring Program
  • Run out of Country Health
  • Organises placements for rural/remote doctors and
    nurses in the City
  • Provides education and establishes links
  • Aims to
  • Increase/improve chemotherapy delivery in country
  • Improve understanding of toxicity management

11
SA Health Cancer Network
  • Charged with guiding the implementation of the
    State-wide Cancer Control Plan, in line with the
    new State Health Plan

12
Subcommittees
  • Cancer prevention and early detection
  • Optimising cancer care
  • Infrastructure planning
  • Workforce planning
  • Cancer Control Research
  • Cancer Information

13
Optimising Cancer Care subcommittee ..
  • Patient journey

14
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15
Plans
  • Appointed a Project Manager
  • 3 tumours as test cases
  • Upper GI
  • Adolescent/Young Adult
  • Lymphoma
  • Working party for each charged with developing a
    patient pathway
  • Proof-of-concept for other tumours
  • Resource development

16
MBBS Curriculum, University of AdelaideThe
triple spiral
  • Concept maps for content
  • PBL for 1st three years
  • Cases
  • Resource sessions
  • Supporting Lectures
  • Clinical skills and MPPD
  • Exposure to patients in 1st year
  • Horizontal and vertical integration
  • Reinforcing and increasing sophistication as
    progress
  • Mapping and tracking
  • To ensure optimum coverage of content
  • Years 4-6 are hospital based
  • Mainly clinical but with SBM and MPPD embedded

17
Graduate Outcomes
  • Undifferentiated doctor with abilities and skills
    for
  • Seamless transition to post-graduate training
  • Continuing into advanced training in any area
  • Distinguishing features
  • Adult learners who enjoy pursuit of life-long
    learning
  • Superior integration of knowledge across
    disciplines
  • Application of basic science into clinical
    management
  • High sense of duty of care

18
Outcomes of Special Interest
  • Prepared for Internship in 2006
  • Excellent communicators self-directed learners
  • Experience of
  • Rural medicine
  • Preventative medicine/Public health
  • Cost pressures
  • Critical reasoning and research methodology
  • Ethically aware trained in social justice and
    equity issues
  • IT-literate
  • Special attention has been paid to
  • Indigenous culture and health issues,
  • Gay and lesbian issues,
  • Health relating to Persons with disability

19
Factors affecting teaching within the Health
System
  • Hospital medical staff are extremely busy
  • Increasing pressure on service delivery
  • Teaching time is vulnerable
  • Staff who teach are not valued and rewarded for
    teaching
  • GPs are likewise extremely busy and not funded
    well for teaching
  • There is a risk that we will not be able to
    adequately train the doctors of the future

20
The Future
  • We need to look at the requirements for doctors
    in 2015
  • Increases in Medical knowledge make it impossible
    to know everything
  • Consideration needs to be given to
  • Core competencies
  • Shorter undergraduate courses
  • Changes to intern and early post-graduate
    training
  • The idea of returning to education at different
    stages of career
  • What impact will the State Health Plan have?
  • Curriculum review is necessarily ongoing and
    permanent!

21
Regional Survey
  • A survey of nursing and medical staff was
  • conducted throughout country S.A.
  • This survey was developed to
  • - Identify gaps in oncology knowledge and skills
  • - Identify what education strategies are
    preferred by regional clinicians and
  • Identify the problems clinicians encounter in
    caring for chemo patients

22
Survey Results
  • 60 of people surveyed returned the questionnaire
  • 9 rated themselves a 4/4 for their knowledge of
    chemotherapy
  • 15 rated themselves a 4/4 for their confidence
    in administering chemotherapy
  • 57 have had education sessions on cancer or
    chemo
  • 19 rated themselves a 4/4 to safely access and
    de-access an infusaport
  • 20 rated themselves a 4/4 to take bloods from
    and administer IVABs to a central venous line

23
Top 20 diagnoses on separation from Adelaide
hospitals (excluding private) by country
residents (2005 -2006)
24
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25
Clinical Issues for Rural Doctors
  • Access to specialist advice
  • Better ability to give cancer treatment locally
  • LMHS Linear Accelerator
  • ?Whyalla next
  • Chemotherapy training
  • Better knowledge of supportive care and help in
    emergencies
  • ?Single telephone number for cancer help

26
Management of Toxicities
  • In-house mostly done by protocol
  • These need to be readily available from treatment
    centres
  • Web access would be preferable
  • Cancer Australia could act as a repository
  • Ci-Scat has quite a few

27
The Way Forward
  • The Cancer Network needs to ensure the needs of
    rural/remote patients and practitioners are
    included in everything it does
  • The Optimising Cancer Care Committee needs to
    produce resources that are readily available
    address the issues
  • The RCMP and ABHI initiatives will improve
    communication
  • We will look at a single number system

28
Conclusion
  • Every level of service is affected by the State
    Health Care Plan
  • Constructive engagement will produce the best
    outcomes
  • All roads seem to be leading to Rome in terms of
    Network, CanNet, ABHI, RCMP
  • Ongoing communication is the key
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