Title: The International Psycho-Oncology Society (IPOS)
1The International Psycho-Oncology Society(IPOS)
Jimmie C. Holland, M.D. Wayne E. Chapman Chair in
Psychiatric Oncology Memorial Sloan-Kettering
Cancer Center New York, New York
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3IPOS Founded 1984
- To improve the human side of cancer care on
a global basis
4IPOS 1984
-
- Foster international communication
- Educate professionals in psychosocial care
across countries - Advocate for making psychosocial an integral
part of total cancer care - Examine social, cultural factors that impact
quality of life and care
5- An International Survey of Physician Attitudes
and Practice in Regard to Revealing the Diagnosis
of Cancer - Jimmie C. Holland, M.D.,
- Natalie Geary, B.A.,
- Anthony Marchini, B.A., and
- Susan Tross, Ph.D.
- Psychiatry Service
- Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center
- New York, New York, 10021
- Cancer Investigation, 5(2), 151-154 (1987)
6Oncologists Estimated Percentage of Physicians in
Their Country Who Disclose Cancer Diagnosis
- N 90 oncologists 20 countries
- Tell to the Patient
- LOW HIGH
- Africa Austria
- France Denmark
- Hungary Finland
- Iran Netherlands
- Panama New Zealand
- Portugal Norway
- Spain Switzerland
- Sweden
- Tell to the Family
- High estimated by majority of physicians
7IPOS 2005
- Education
- Conducted 7 World Congresses 2006, Venice
- gt 25 national psycho-oncology societies
- International journal, 1992
- Psycho-Oncology
- Text books in English, Spanish, Italian, and
Japanese
8IPOS 2005
- Education
- 2004 Website www.ipos-society.org
- Core curriculum online FREE
- 4 lectures, with European School of Oncology in
- Italian German
- French Hungarian
- Spanish English
9IPOS 2005
- Requested to become an NGO of World
Health Organization - Rationale to add a psychological, social and
behavorial dimension to WHO national cancer
control programs
10WHO Priority Action Plan forNational Cancer
Control Programs
Resources A B
C Low Medium High Prevention Early
diagnosis Screening/therapy Pain/palliative care
PSYCHOSOCIAL
11WHO Cancer Prevention Program
- Depends on changes in life style and exposures
must alter BEHAVIOR - Psychological and social factors are critical
considerations in prevention education which
must be culture and language-sensitive - Behavioral scientists needed
- (Tobacco Cessation)
12WHO Cancer Control ProgramEarly Diagnosis
- Fatalistic attitudes, fear of stigma of
cancer, and ignorance are problems, especially
in developing countries - Public education requires attention to
psychological, social, cultural, and behavioral
factors
13WHO Cancer ControlScreening
- Participation in screening require attention
to local social attitudes, beliefs, trust in
procedures/staff, and awareness of cultural
factors - Requires knowledge of community, beliefs, and
fears
14WHO Priorities for National Cancer Control
Programs
15In Palliative Care
- Pain is often the primary focus
- Psychological issues are often not identified
and treated as an equally important aspect of
end-of-life care - Need for more participation of
psycho- oncologists in end-of-life for clinical
and research collaboration
16IPOS Goals in Palliative Care
- Encourage recognition, diagnosis and treatment
of psychosocial and psychiatric problems - Develop standards and clinical practice
guidelines for psychological care
17National Programs
- Standards and Guidelines
- Australia United Kingdom Canada United States
18US Example 1999
- A Multidisciplinary Panel (NCCN)
-
- Chose DISTRESS as an encompassing word to
cover psychosocial/ psychiatric and spiritual - A rapid one-item screening question
- Standards care and Clinical Practice
Guidelines for mental health, social work,
clergy
19DISTRESS CONTINUUM
- NormalDistress
- Fears
- Worries
- Sadness
SevereDistress Depression, Anxiety Family Spir
itual
20STANDARDS OF CARE FOR MANAGEMENT OF DISTRESS - 1
- Distress should be recognized, monitored,
documented and treated promptly at all stages of
disease - All patients should be screened for distress at
their initial visit and as clinically indicated - Screening should identify the level and nature of
the distress - Distress should be assessed and managed by
evidence or consensus-based clinical practice
guidelines - Adapted, NCCN
21BRIEF SCREENING TOOL AND PROBLEM LIST
Please indicate your level of distress on the
thermometer and check the causes of your distress.
During the past week, how distressed have you
been?
- Practical problems
- __ Housing
- __ Insurance
- __ Work/school
- __ Transportation
- __ Child care
- Family problems
- __ Partner
- __ Children
- Emotional problems
- __ Worry
- __ Sadness
- __ Depression
- __ Nervousness
- Spiritual/religious concerns
- __ Relating to God
Physical problems __ Pain __ Nausea __ Fatigue __
Sleep __ Getting around __ Bathing/dressing __
Breathing __ Mouth sores __ Eating __
Indigestion __ Constipation/diarrhea __ Bowel
changes __ Changes in urination __ Fevers __ Skin
dry/itchy __ Nose dry/congested __ Tingling in
hands/feet __ Feeling swollen __ Sexual problems
ExtremeDistress
NoDistress
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23DISTRESS LADDERMANAGEMENT BY STANDARDS
PRACTICE GUIDELINES
5
DISTRESSScale (010)
lt 5
Adapted from WHO Analgesic Ladder
24Canada
- June, 2004 The National Cancer Council
-
- Distress added as the 6th vital sign
(temperature, pulse, respiration, blood
pressure, pain, distress) - To be asked about routinely at patient visits
25Major Barriers in Every Country
- Poor to absent funding
- Absence of oversight and accountability
(changing in Australia, Canada, UK) - Awareness of the importance to patients and
families (especially in palliative care) - Mehnert and Koch, 2003
26Action Item - 1
- IPOS, with WHO, seeks to bring the psychosocial
domain into global cancer control programs - IPOS advocates for national standards and
clinical practice guidelines
27Action Item - 2
- IPOS provides oversight of global efforts
- Collate international data for cross- cultural
studies - Promotes multidisciplinary multi-national
research
28Action Item - 3
- Establish WHO-supported international standards
and guidelines -
- For use by national societies to impact
policies on service delivery - To provide professional training standards
- To influence national funding priorities
- To impact governmental agencies via WHO,
UICC, IARC - To foster research for evidence-based care
29- What we value can be seen in what we
measure. - Dr. Robert McMurtry
- Public Policy, Human Consequences The
Gap Between Biomedicine and Psychosocial
Reality - Canada Oncology Exchange, 2003
30PAIN
DISTRESS
318th WORLD CONGRESS PSYCHO-ONCOLOGY
"Multidisciplinary Psychosocial Oncology
Dialogue and Interaction"
18 - 21 October 2006 Palazzo del Cinema Venice,
Italy
Details will continue to be posted on the
conference website at www.ipos2006.it