Investigating Physical, Social, Emotional, and Health Frailties of Cancer Survivors after Cancer Treatment: The Urgent Call for Tailored Multidisciplinary Survivorship Plans in Italy
Stefania Moramarco, Luigi De Angelis, Laura Bernardini, Lorenza Marconi, Gaia Piunno, Simonetta Siciliano, Andrea Malizia, Ersilia Buonomo, Alessia Pesaresi, Angela Andreoli, Barbara Capotondi, Mario Roselli, Leonardo Palombi, Francesco Torino

TL;DR
This study explores the physical, mental, and social challenges faced by cancer survivors in Italy and highlights the need for personalized care plans.
Contribution
This is one of the first multidimensional studies on cancer survivor needs in Italy, emphasizing tailored multidisciplinary care.
Findings
Cancer survivors, especially those over 65, show more frailties than the general population.
Older survivors have a higher risk of multimorbidity, with significant differences in co-morbidities between age groups.
Survivors often have multiple co-morbidities and report poor physical and functional status.
Abstract
This pilot study aims to identify the physical, mental, social, psychological, and health needs encountered by cancer survivors in order to propose and facilitate appropriate and tailored responses. To the best of our knowledge, this is one of the first multidimensional studies investigating this topic in Italy. Data show that the quality of life of cancer survivors is affected by cancer and its treatment, reporting more frailties than the general population, especially those over 65 years old. These findings could help develop multidisciplinary planning of survivorship care for the transition of patients from oncological management to primary healthcare. Background: Understanding the specific needs of cancer survivors is essential for healthcare policy. In Italy, dedicated studies are lacking, so we aimed to investigate the physical, mental, social, and health difficulties encountered…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCancer survivorship and care · Palliative Care and End-of-Life Issues · Frailty in Older Adults
