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Cancer as a chronic disease: Implications for Cancer Services in Ontario Cancer Care Ontario Annual General Meeting April 26, 2007 Metropolitan Hotel 108 Chestnut Street Toronto, ON Overview 1. Cancer Care Ontario: 2006-2007 in Review 2. Cancer as a chronic disease 3. Implications for the cancer system 1. Cancer Care Ontario: 2006-2007 in Review How Are We Doing on Volumes of Service? Actual 20052006 Screens for OBSP Actual 20062007 Growth 290,959 333,016 14.45% New Radiation Cases 37,375 38,386 2.70% New Systemic Cases 32,022 36,462 13.86% 4,186 5,116 22.22% Additional Surgical Cases Source: Cancer Care Ontario ICMS (OBSP), iPort (Radiation, Systemic), MoHLTC MIS (Systemic – non ICPs), PMH (Radiation, Systemic) How Are We Doing Financially? 2006/07 Annual Operating Budget: 531M Funding to Healthcare Facilities 317M New Drug Funding Program 141M 38M MOHLTC Wait Times Strategy CCO’s Financial Position (000s) Net Position Projected Actual March 31, 2007 500 March 31, 2006 851 Growth in MOHLTC Revenue 2004 - 2005 MOHLTC Funding $ 409,952 Projected 2006 - 2007 2005 - 2006 $ 460,090 12% $ 530,919 15% Ontario Cancer Plan The final installment of the first 3 year Ontario Cancer Plan released in January 2007 – Roadmap for improving cancer prevention and services – Annual progress report and action plan for year ahead 06-07 Highlights At-a-Glance Significant Progress Smoke-Free Ontario First Colorectal Cancer Screening Program Radiation and Surgery Wait Times No Improvement Overall Breast Cancer Screening Rates Overall Cervical Cancer Screening Rates Needs Attention Access to Chemotherapy Colorectal Cancer Screening Rates Gaps in Patient Journey Healthy weights Local Cancer Service Integration Quality and safety • • • Computerized Drug Ordering Clinical guidelines Organizational standards Data capture across continuum Joint Oncology Drug Review 2. Cancer as a chronic disease Number of newly diagnosed cancer cases Aging & Growing Population are Driving Increased Cancer Incidence Source: Cancer Care Ontario, iPort. Prevalence 10 Year Prevalence count and rates for all cancers, Ontario, by age group 300,000 200 275,000 180 250,000 160 Age-standardized rate per 10,000 225,000 Number 200,000 175,000 150,000 125,000 100,000 75,000 140 120 20-44 100 45-74 75+ 80 60 50,000 40 25,000 20 0 0-19 0 1984 2004 1984 Source: CancerYear Care Ontario (Ontario Cancer Registry, 2007) 2004 Year Cancer Care Then and Now 2004 1984 124,119 individuals alive within 10 years of diagnosis 260,045 individuals alive within 10 years of diagnosis Single cancer drug costs $2,500 Single cancer drug costs $25,000 Number of cancer screening programs = 0 Ontario Breast Screening Program Ontario Cervical Screening Program Smoking allowed in workplaces, restaurants, bars, airplanes Smoke-Free Ontario introduced – 100% ban on smoking in public spaces and workplaces Source: Cancer Care Ontario, Ontario Cancer Registry, New Drug Funding Program (iPort) Transformation of Cancer 1936 1973 1994 2004 Long-Term Cancer Survival Age Standardized Relative Survival Ratios for Major Cancers Colorectal, Male Colorectal, Female Prostate Female Breast 5 year relative survival ratio (%) 100 80 60 40 20 0 1975-79 1977-81 1979-83 1981-85 1983-87 1985-89 1987-91 Year of Diagnosis Source: Cancer Care Ontario (Ontario Cancer Registry, 2007) 1989-93 1991-95 1993-97 1995-99 Age Standardized 5 Year Relative Survival Ratios for Two Periods of Diagnosis (1977-79 vs. 1997-99) All sites Pancreas 1977-1979 Trachea, bronchus and lung 1997-1999 Stom ach Leukem ia Non-Hodgkin lym phom a Colon and rectum Kidney and other and unspecified Oral cavity Prostate Fem ale breast Melanom a of skin Body of uterus Thyroid gland 0 20 40 60 Percent 80 100 What is Behind the Transformation of Cancer Survival? • Better Prevention and Detection • • • • Lifestyle Infection control Regulation Screening • More Precise/Effective Treatment Methods • Image guided surgery • IM/IG radiation • Molecular/Biologic systemic therapies • Population-Based Disease Prevention and Management • Evidence based protocols • Quality management • Shorter knowledge transfer gap in use of evidence Cancers Today Cancer is over 200 different diseases, some of which are chronic • Cancers with poor survival growth – lung, esophageal, pancreatic • Chronic cancers – breast, prostate, colorectal • Cancers with long shadows – childhood and young adult cancer Intensification of Systemic Treatment in Canada 240,000 200,000 160,000 120,000 80,000 1997 1998 Incidence 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 Patients Receiving Drug Therapy 2005 After Effects of Cancer Cancer treatments are improving but still dangerous: • 260,000 10-year cancer survivors in Ontario – • Second primary malignancies now account for 16% of all cancer incidence in this group After Effects – Late effects on normal tissues – Radiation-induced second malignancies – Endocrine and reproductive effects – Cardiac toxicity – Cognitive effects – Anxiety, depression, psychosocial effects Implication: need safer treatments, evidence-based treatment standards Facts About Chronic Diseases • Chronic disease accounts for 89% of all deaths in Canada; projected to rise 15% in next 10 years • Account for approx. two thirds of Canadian health care spending • Chronic diseases (cancer, heart disease and stroke, emphysema and diabetes) share common, often man-made causes: poor diet, smoking and inactivity • Require population-based approach Population-Based Chronic Disease Management • Focuses on prevention and wellness across care continuum • Hospitals’ focus on acute patients • Encourages patients to take control; community-wide education key • Health policy and delivery system realignment 3. Cancer System Implications Cancer System Implications 1. Move towards disease management models of care • • • Fill gaps Prevention and detection Colorectal, lung 2. Integration across the “cancer patient journey” 3. Patient self-care 4. Changing our mindset about cancer Move towards disease management models of care Patient Journey Colorectal Cancer Patient Journey Primary Care & the Cancer Journey Specialty Care Primary Care Primary Care Primary Care Practices with Advanced Information Capacity Percent reporting seven or more out of 14 functions* 100 75 87 83 72 59 50 32 19 25 8 0 AUS CAN GER NETH NZ UK US Count of 14: EMR, EMR access other doctors, outside office, patient; routine use electronic ordering tests, prescriptions, access test results, access hospital records; computer for reminders, Rx alerts, prompt tests results; easy to list diagnosis, medications, patients due for care. Canadian Primary Care Doctors = 578 •Source: 2006 Commonwealth Fund International Health Policy Survey of Primary Care Physicians . Patients Routinely Sent Reminder Notices for Preventive or Follow-Up Care Yes, using a manual system Percent Yes, using a computerized system 100 75 5 18 16 50 25 14 24 65 20 93 83 61 28 18 8 0 AUS CAN GER 32 NETH NZ UK US Source: 2006 Commonwealth Fund International Health Policy Survey of Primary Care Physicians. Opportunities for Primary Care Family Health Teams • Aligning incentives for health promotion, prevention, chronic disease management • P-Prompt: promising innovation • Biggest challenge: Digital Divide • Effective electronic integration of office systems, secondary, tertiary care – prompts, reminders, call backs, interoperable systems Opportunities for Primary Care Partnership with the Ontario College of Family Physicians, Family Health Teams Colorectal Cancer Screening Program – Opportunity: Trusted contact point for patients; opportunity to test chronic disease management innovations – Challenge: Family physicians have low awareness, lack of consensus about colorectal screening; poorly linked to cancer care system Diagnostic Assessment Programs (DAPs) • The diagnostic phase of cancer care (Wait 1) has critical impact on a patient’s anxiety, health and well-being • One of least developed areas of “cancer journey” • CCO created DAP standards – All models include: multidisciplinary teams, customized patient information, psychosocial support, primary care or self-referral Ottawa Diagnostic Assessment Unit Champlain Model for Improving Access to Quality Cancer Surgery The Montfort Hospital The Ottawa Hospital (TOH) Satellite Cancer Program Cancer Hub TOH Regional Cancer Centre Cancer Assessment Centre • • • • The Queensway-Carleton Hospital Satellite Cancer Program Leadership in Quality Agenda Central Coordination Access to Integrated Cancer Care Surgical Consultation for Ottawa Patients and Complex Case Renfrew Victoria Hospital Cornwall Community Hospital Satellite Cancer Program Pembroke Regional Hospital Satellite Cancer Program Satellite Cancer Program Satellite Cancer Program Winchester District Memorial Hospital Satellite Cancer Program Hawkesbury District General Hospital Cancer Surgery Standards Distribution of Thoracic Cancer Surgery Index Cases in Ontario, 2004-2005 Distribution of Thoracic Cancer Surgery Index Cases in Ontario, 2004-2005 300 250 Lung Number of cases Esoph 200 150 100 50 0 A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V Hospital W X Y Z AA BB CC DD EE FF GG HH II KK LL MM NN OO Regional Model for Quality Systemic Therapy Regional Model for Quality Systemic Therapy Level 1 or 2 Integrated Cancer Program Academic Leadership Complex Care Level 3 Systemic Systemic Therapy Therapy Satellite Affiliate Level 4 Systemic Therapy Satellite REGIONAL SYSTEMIC THERAPY PROGRAM Level 3 Systemic Therapy Affiliate Standards and Clinical Pathways Performance Data Multidisciplinary Cancer Conferences Level 4 Systemic Therapy Satellite Level 3 Level 3 Systemic Therapy Systemic Therapy Affiliate Affiliate Systemic Therapy Systemic Therapy Satellite Satellite Formal Agreement Level 4 Level 4 End-of-life Care 85% of palliative patients have cancer. Most prefer to die in community/home; 53% died in hospitals Palliative Care Integration Project – standard tool to improve symptom management, pain; allow cancer patients to die in setting of choice CCO Research Program Experimental Therapeutics Molecular Epidemiology Imaging Health Services Research Integration Across the “Cancer Patient Journey” CCO Model for Driving Performance Improvement 1. Data/Information 2. Knowledge • • • • • • • • Incidence, mortality, survival analysis indicator development expert input 4. Performance Management • • • • institutional agreements quarterly review quality - linked funding clinical accountability research production evidence-based guidelines policy analysis planning 3. Transfer • • • • • • publications practice leaders engaged policy advice public reporting technology tools process innovation Cancer System Integration There is variation across several dimensions of cancer services integration. Patient Self-Care Patient-Centred Care? Outcomes Among the domains of patient satisfaction (coordination, respect for patient preferences, physical comfort, communication & education, access, emotional support) emotional support is consistently ranked lowest (57% in 2006) Patient Self-Care • Survivorship vs. thrivership • Balancing professional and informal supports • Reaching out to vulnerable populations PMH Breast Cancer Survivorship Program: Interventions for self-care of late effects Memory, Weight loss and Fatigue Clinics: • Education strategies, tips and coaching survivors for selfcare • Disease self management tools Changing Our Mindset About Cancer “People everywhere are going over the cliffs, developing cancers that could be prevented, dying of cancers that could be cured. Some 700,000 Canadians have cancer today, me included. Your job is to stop that happening. Don’t leave here until you have a blueprint and a flow chart. And your luggage bulging with determination. I wish you well.” - June Callwood, National Cancer Leadership Forum, 2003