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Teleoncology: The Youngest Pillar of Oncology

Puneet Pareek, Jeewan Ram Vishnoi, Sri Harsha Kombathula, Rakesh Kumar Vyas, Sanjeev Misra

2020JCO Global Oncology42 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The core pillars of multimodal care of patients with cancer are surgical, radiation, and medical oncology. The global pandemic of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has suddenly resurrected a new pillar in oncology care: teleoncology. With oncologists reaching out to patients through telemedicine, it is possible to evaluate and fulfill patients' needs; triage patients for elective procedures; screen them for influenza-like illness; provide them with guidance for hospital visits, if needed; and bridge oral medications and treatments when a hospital visit is not desirable because of any high risk-benefit ratio. Teleoncology can bring great reassurance to patients at times when reaching an oncology center is challenging, and more so in resource-constrained countries. Evidence-based treatment protocols, dispensable by teleoncology, already exist for many sites of cancer and they can provide a bridge to treatment when patients are unable to reach cancer centers for their standard treatment. The young pillar of teleoncology is going to remain much longer than COVID-19.

Topics & Concepts

PillarPandemicMedicineTriageRadiation oncologyCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)CancerIntensive care medicineOncology nursingTelemedicineDiseaseRadiation therapyHealth careMedical emergencyGeneral surgeryInternal medicineNursingInfectious disease (medical specialty)EngineeringEconomicsNurse educationEconomic growthStructural engineeringCOVID-19 and healthcare impactsTelemedicine and Telehealth ImplementationEconomic and Financial Impacts of Cancer
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