Alicia Morgans, MD, MPH Discusses the Importance of Patient Support Networks During the COVID-19 Pandemic

Video

CancerNetwork® sat down with Alicia Morgans MD, MPH, at the 2021 European Society for Medical Oncology to talk about the important role that patient support networks play for those with cancer and the challenge of separating patients from their loved ones during the COVID-19 pandemic.

At the 2021 European Society of Medical Oncology Congress, CancerNetwork® spoke with Alicia Morgans, MD, MPH, director of the survivorship program at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, about the importance of patient support networks for those with cancer during the COVID-19 pandemic. Morgans highlighted the challenges in separating patients from their loved ones when entering the clinic room, as well as the strength and resilient she saw from her patients during the pandemic.

Transcript:

The pandemic has truly turned the whole world upside down. Whether you work in cancer care, whether you’re a parent, whether you have a job that you now can’t go to regularly, all of us have experienced and been touched by the events from the last year.

Specifically, when it comes to cancer care, I think that it has shown me how incredibly important patient support networks are to them. When we had periods of time in our clinics where we couldn’t let family members come into the clinic room and patients had to be on their own, it was truly heart wrenching. I’m glad that we as healthcare providers are able now to be vaccinated [and can] let family members support the patients that they care about. I think that I never want to learn the lesson again where I have to separate people from their support. I’m just so amazed at how much the people around [those] with cancer do to get people through these experiences. I’m just touched, and I’m happy that we hopefully will not have to do that again.

Related Videos
Collaboration among nurses, social workers, and others may help in safely administering outpatient bispecific T-cell engager therapy to patients.
Nurses should be educated on cranial nerve impairment that may affect those with multiple myeloma who receive cilta-cel, says Leslie Bennett, MSN, RN.
Treatment with cilta-cel may give patients with multiple myeloma “more time,” according to Ishmael Applewhite, BSN, RN-BC, OCN.
Nurses may need to help patients with multiple myeloma adjust to walking differently in the event of peripheral neuropathy following cilta-cel.
Tailoring neoadjuvant therapy regimens for patients with mismatch repair deficient gastroesophageal cancer represents a future step in terms of research.
Not much is currently known about the factors that may predict pathologic responses to neoadjuvant immunotherapy in this population, says Adrienne Bruce Shannon, MD.
Data highlight that patients who are in Black and poor majority areas are less likely to receive liver ablation or colorectal liver metastasis in surgical cancer care.
Findings highlight how systemic issues may impact disparities in outcomes following surgery for patients with cancer, according to Muhammad Talha Waheed, MD.
Pegulicianine-guided breast cancer surgery may allow practices to de-escalate subsequent radiotherapy, says Barbara Smith, MD, PhD.
Adrienne Bruce Shannon, MD, discussed ways to improve treatment and surgical outcomes for patients with dMMR gastroesophageal cancer.