COVID-19: The Impact in Oncology Care.
Upasana RayFaisal AzizAbhishek ShankarAalekhya Sharma BiswasAbhishek ShankarPublished in: SN comprehensive clinical medicine (2020)
The COVID-19 pandemic has imposed a critical challenge to the current oncology care and practices including late diagnoses, delayed anti-cancer treatment, and static clinical trials. With the increasing risk of cancer patients acquiring infection during receiving the essential care, the debate ensues on how to balance the risk factors and benefits out of the oncologic emergencies in cancer patients. In this review article, we have focused on the current global re-organization of the integrity and effectiveness of the treatment modalities depending on the patient and cancer-specific urgencies while minimizing exposure to the infection. In this review, we addressed how the worldwide oncology community is united to share therapy schemes and the best possible guidelines to help cancer patients, and to strategize and execute therapy/trial protocols. This review provides collective knowledge on the current re-structuring of the general framework that prioritizes cancer care with the available exploitation of the reduced resources and most importantly the unparalleled levels of companionship as a large health care community towards the need to offer the best possible care to the patients.
Keyphrases
- healthcare
- palliative care
- clinical trial
- quality improvement
- risk factors
- randomized controlled trial
- sars cov
- mental health
- affordable care act
- pain management
- primary care
- coronavirus disease
- newly diagnosed
- stem cells
- squamous cell carcinoma
- study protocol
- prognostic factors
- case report
- chronic pain
- phase ii
- ejection fraction
- clinical practice
- phase iii
- social media
- health information
- minimally invasive
- combination therapy
- replacement therapy
- childhood cancer