2012
DOI: 10.1007/s13142-012-0145-4
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Process of diffusing cancer survivorship care into oncology practice

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Cited by 5 publications
(3 citation statements)
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References 17 publications
(28 reference statements)
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“…In light of the growing evidence of the need for cancer survivorship care [32] and work rehabilitation, studies such as ours can help identify groups expected to have the largest needs of rehabilitation [33] and thereby to implement survivorship care into oncology practice [34]. Multidisciplinary interventions should involve physical, psychological, and vocational components and promote a healthy work environment/ lifestyle [35][36][37].…”
Section: Increased Risk In Hodgkinmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In light of the growing evidence of the need for cancer survivorship care [32] and work rehabilitation, studies such as ours can help identify groups expected to have the largest needs of rehabilitation [33] and thereby to implement survivorship care into oncology practice [34]. Multidisciplinary interventions should involve physical, psychological, and vocational components and promote a healthy work environment/ lifestyle [35][36][37].…”
Section: Increased Risk In Hodgkinmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The care challenges described above can be compounded when active treatment is prioritised over survivorship care. This prioritisation likely reflects a number of historical and organisational factors: the traditional focus of health care on "cure" and the minimal extent to which survivorship is addressed in health workforce education [24]; the absence or inadequacy of staff training in survivorship issues to ensure confidence in providing such care [25]; the low priority given to survivorship issues at an organisational level, evidenced by the lack of comprehensive integrated survivorship care services which comply with all IOM recommendations in most hospitals [23]; and the lack of appropriate funding models to support the delivery of survivorship care [26][27][28][29][30][31].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This model emphasizes that innovators or early adopters may serve as role models for other members of a social system and influence other members’ adoption of the innovation. The DIT has been used to conceptualize studies that investigate how cancer-related behaviors spread through members of society and to identify factors associated with the early adoption of cancer screening (e.g., Hahm, Park, Lee, Park, & Park, 2011; Tessaro et al, 2013). Based on this perspective, our study explored whether cosmetologists are in a position to deliver cervical cancer–related information to the community by first adopting cancer-related messages and then sharing them with their customers.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%