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      Cancer Management in India during Covid-19

      letter
      , M.S. , , M.S.
      The New England Journal of Medicine
      Massachusetts Medical Society
      Keyword part (code): 2Keyword part (keyword): Hematology/OncologyKeyword part (code): 2_1Keyword part (keyword): Hematology/Oncology General , 2, Hematology/Oncology, Keyword part (code): 2_1Keyword part (keyword): Hematology/Oncology General, 2_1, Hematology/Oncology General, Keyword part (code): 18Keyword part (keyword): Infectious DiseaseKeyword part (code): 18_6Keyword part (keyword): Viral InfectionsKeyword part (code): 18_9Keyword part (keyword): Global Health , 18, Infectious Disease, Keyword part (code): 18_6Keyword part (keyword): Viral InfectionsKeyword part (code): 18_9Keyword part (keyword): Global Health , 18_6, Viral Infections, 18_9, Global Health, Keyword part (code): 24Keyword part (keyword): Health PolicyKeyword part (code): 24_5Keyword part (keyword): Health Care Delivery , 24, Health Policy, Keyword part (code): 24_5Keyword part (keyword): Health Care Delivery, 24_5, Health Care Delivery

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          Abstract

          To rapidly communicate short reports of innovative responses to Covid-19 around the world, along with a range of current thinking on policy and strategy relevant to the pandemic, the Journal has initiated the Covid-19 Notes series. The Covid-19 pandemic has created major dilemmas for providers in all areas of health care delivery, including cancer centers. The rapid spread of SARS-CoV-2, combined with an unprecedented, near-complete global lockdown, has laid bare the weaknesses in health systems. Lack of adequate health care infrastructure and human resources, serious supply-chain disruptions, and widespread fear among patients and health care workers have resulted in patient care and safety being compromised. Throughout the world, health systems have had to scramble together rapidly changing responses while relying on inadequate information and on models of disease spread that are based on multiple assumptions. The resulting rationing of care has left patients and physicians feeling frustrated and burned out. Several cancer centers drastically scaled back their services after preliminary reports from China showed that Covid-19 outcomes are significantly worse among patients with cancer. At Tata Memorial Centre (India’s largest cancer center), despite having to scale back operations by about one third, we made the decision to continue providing cancer care using a proactive and multipronged approach (www.indianjcancer.com/preprintarticle.asp?id=281968), the components of which are summarized in Table 1. Some degree of scaling back was required to allow for physical distancing in clinics and because India’s lockdown prevented some patients and health care workers from being able to reach the hospital. We also established a staff-sparing strategy, which involved providing paid leave for at-risk employees and rotating remaining staff. Our de-escalation of services has been far less pronounced than the cuts made at similar cancer facilities globally. The decision not to cut routine services was based on two factors. First, because the government took early decisive action, SARS-CoV-2 has spread more slowly in India than in some other countries, and we are not yet seeing large numbers of hospitalizations for Covid-19 in Mumbai. More important, for a center that sees more than 70,000 new patients with cancer each year, even a slowdown in clinical services is likely to have a substantial impact on outcomes. Although cancer is often not immediately life threatening, treatment services are also not entirely elective, and delaying care can have serious adverse consequences. The constraints created by the pandemic have required us to make some difficult choices, including those we made in drawing up prioritization criteria to guide treatment decisions. Patients with potentially curable disease who could substantially benefit from treatment are given high priority, whereas care for patients who were being treated with palliative intent, especially those for whom interventions are expected to have marginal benefit, is being deferred. Decisions about care for individual patients are made by balancing the risk that patients will contract Covid-19 because of exposures associated with cancer treatment — and their risk for complications if they do — with the benefits of receiving potentially lifesaving cancer treatment. We have already learned a great deal from this pandemic. Being forced to quickly respond led to a radical overhauling of entrenched hospital systems and processes, which ultimately made our operations more efficient. The rapidly evolving nature of the pandemic meant that we needed the full and unconditional support of our large body of employees. We gained this support by establishing open electronic-communication channels and a process for shared decision making, despite circumstances that preclude face-to-face meetings. We were quick to share best practices and guidelines for cancer treatment during the pandemic with other hospitals in India by creating a series of webinars available through the National Cancer Grid, a network of cancer centers that includes our hospital (https://ncgeducation.in/course/view.php?id=37). The decisions we had to make regarding triaging of patients for cancer treatment will undoubtedly be helpful when we establish a robust health technology assessment program, an essential tool in a country where public health care expenditures are low. Our previous work on the “Choosing Wisely India” campaign to outline low-value or harmful practices in cancer care (https://www.thelancet.com/article/S1470-2045(19)30092-0/fulltext) also facilitated our Covid-19 response. Countries that have not had high rates of death from Covid-19 could consider similar approaches that involve balancing pandemic control with providing continued cancer care.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          N Engl J Med
          N. Engl. J. Med
          nejm
          The New England Journal of Medicine
          Massachusetts Medical Society
          0028-4793
          1533-4406
          28 April 2020
          28 April 2020
          : NEJMc2011595
          Affiliations
          Tata Memorial Centre, Mumbai, India
          Article
          NJ202004283822004
          10.1056/NEJMc2011595
          7207224
          32343498
          f8f565e3-9d10-406c-95ed-6b008ae6ce1d
          Copyright © 2020 Massachusetts Medical Society. All rights reserved.

          This article is made available via the PMC Open Access Subset for unrestricted re-use, except commercial resale, and analyses in any form or by any means with acknowledgment of the original source. These permissions are granted for the duration of the Covid-19 pandemic or until revoked in writing. Upon expiration of these permissions, PMC is granted a license to make this article available via PMC and Europe PMC, subject to existing copyright protections.

          History
          Categories
          Correspondence
          Covid-19 Notes
          Custom metadata
          2020-04-28T12:00:00-04:00
          2020
          04
          28
          12
          00
          00
          -04:00

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