Availability and adaption of exercise programs in pediatric oncology during the COVID-19 pandemic and beyond: a nationwide follow-up survey of providers in Germany
Sabine Kesting, Dominik Gaser, Jennifer Queisser, Miriam Götte, Irene von Luettichau, Christiane Peters, Renate Oberhoffer-Fritz, Gabriele Gauß

TL;DR
This study explores how the pandemic affected exercise programs for children with cancer in Germany and how providers adapted to these challenges.
Contribution
The paper presents novel insights into the adaptation and delivery of pediatric oncology exercise programs during and after the pandemic in Germany.
Findings
85% of exercise programs faced restrictions in 2020 and 2021, with some effects persisting into 2022.
Providers adapted by using digital methods and changing locations to continue offering exercise programs.
A lack of exercise-related care for certain patients and survivors was identified, highlighting the need for program expansion.
Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic has presented major challenges to clinical practice and delivery of care programs throughout all health care systems. Exercise programs, that are implemented in most centers for pediatric oncology in Germany, are a relatively new care program however with high clinical impact and health benefits. The impact and consequences of the pandemic on the delivery and availability of exercise programs in Germany for pediatric cancer patients and survivors are unknown. A national survey analyzed restrictions, challenges and novel approaches of exercise program delivery and scientific research. A two-stage online survey was distributed to providers of exercise programs (acute clinics, non-clinical institutions, rehabilitation facilities) via the established Network ActiveOncoKids. Data was collected during the pandemic in 2022 and 2023 using a combination of open and closed…
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Taxonomy
TopicsChildhood Cancer Survivors' Quality of Life · COVID-19 and healthcare impacts · Cancer survivorship and care
