2007
DOI: 10.1200/jop.0723601
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Future Supply and Demand for Oncologists : Challenges to Assuring Access to Oncology Services

Abstract: Purpose: To conduct a comprehensive analysis of supply of and demand for oncology services through 2020. This study was commissioned by the Board of Directors of ASCO.Methods: New data on physician supply gathered from surveys of practicing oncologists, oncology fellows, and fellowship program directors were analyzed, along with 2005 American Medical Association Masterfile data on practicing medical oncologists, hematologists/oncologists, and gynecologic oncologists, to determine the baseline capacity and to f… Show more

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Cited by 467 publications
(349 citation statements)
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References 34 publications
(6 reference statements)
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“…Although all the centers contributing to the database are academic research institutions, most RT in the United States is provided in the private setting. 23 Therefore, it may be inaccurate to generalize our findings to the field as a whole. Third, we have limited this report to patients with NSCLC.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 90%
“…Although all the centers contributing to the database are academic research institutions, most RT in the United States is provided in the private setting. 23 Therefore, it may be inaccurate to generalize our findings to the field as a whole. Third, we have limited this report to patients with NSCLC.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 90%
“…17 Further complicating the future of cancer care are the existing and projected workforce shortages for oncology and primary care clinicians. 3,4,19,20 To achieve efficiencies in caring for cancer patients, inter-professional collaboration is critical and should be promoted by health systems and professional societies.…”
Section: Recommendations 3 and 4: An Adequately Staffed Trained Andmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, the oncology workforce is not expected to keep up with the demand. 3,4 Further, the costs of cancer care continue to increase, outpacing the rise in the costs of care for non-cancer conditions, 3 and may begin to account for a greater share of total health care spending. 5 These factors contribute to a potential crisis in both access and costs, and characterize a cancer care system that is not sustainable.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The number of individuals projected to enter these diverse fields is unlikely to be sufficient to meet the needs of an aging and increasingly diverse population. Serious shortages in the oncology workforce are predicted by 2020 [4,5], and the World Health Organization [6], professional organizations [7,8], and others [9] have stated that to ensure rapid advances in oncology in the coming decades, the cancer research workforce must be invigorated with specialists from emerging fields who are well prepared to 1) ask scientific questions influenced by the experience of those who care for patients, 2) communicate effectively and work collaboratively with multidisciplinary oncology clinical and research teams, and 3) advance discovery and 4 technology to improve diagnosis and discover new treatments and cures in the field of cancer medicine [6][7][8][9].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%