Association of Community Cancer Centers, Rockville, MD
Christina Mangir, Allison Harvey, Angie Santiago, Lori Schneider, Meredith Doherty, Leigh Boehmer, Rifeta Kajdic Hodzic, Lorna Lucas
Background: In 2018, the Association of Community Cancer Centers (ACCC) developed the Financial Advocacy Services Guidelines to support cancer programs and practices with proactively addressing patients’ financial concerns along the cancer care continuum. Since then, research on financial hardship has expanded and the field of financial advocacy has continued to grow and evolve, necessitating new guidelines. Methods: To assess the current landscape of cancer financial advocacy interventions, ACCC conducted a literature scan of articles published between 2016 and 2021 using key words including financial advocacy, navigation, toxicity, oncology, and cancer. In May 2022, ACCC convened a multidisciplinary group of 49 national experts to begin developing new guidelines through a consensus-based Delphi process. To identify changes and additions to the 2018 guidelines, the panel completed a brief qualitative survey that asked which services are most important to include as a part of financial advocacy programs and necessary resources for effective delivery. Responses were compiled in a document and grouped by similarity using a rapid qualitative analysis approach. Results: The literature scan yielded a total of 55 articles. Several key recommendations emerged including the need to further integrate financial advocacy into care planning services, more training across team members to address financial toxicity, and ensuring services are accessible and equitable. Additional areas for research were ways to leverage technology to enhance services, when and how to screen for financial distress, and the development of care models. From the survey, responses clustered in the following domains and sub-domains: Financial Advocacy Services and Functions (Benefits Verification, Pre-Authorization, & Insurance Optimization; Financial Distress Screening; Patient Communication & Education; Financial Assistance); Program Management Functions (Staffing/Roles & Responsibilities, Staff Training, Infrastructure & Information Exchange, Monitoring & Evaluation); and Stakeholder Management Functions. Conclusions: Early input from the panel illuminated numerous areas for defining new guidelines to increase comprehensiveness, incorporate an explicit focus on health equity, and begin to tease out minimal and optimal services and program components and structure. The information from the literature scan and survey are being used by ACCC and a guidelines task force of field experts to draft new financial advocacy services guidelines, which will then go through at least two rounds of rating by the Delphi panel in order to find areas of consensus. ACCC will also hold a series of roundtables with patient advocacy, commercial, and pharmaceutical stakeholders to allow an opportunity to comment on the guidelines as well. The finalized guidelines are expected to be released before June 2023.
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Abstract Disclosures
2019 ASCO Annual Meeting
First Author: Nandita Khera
2023 ASCO Annual Meeting
First Author: Sarah M Sheehan
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2022 ASCO Annual Meeting
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