Expected Surge In Older Cancer Survivors As Baby Boomers Age

Main Category: Cancer / Oncology
Also Included In: Seniors / Aging;  Public Health
Article Date: 11 Dec 2008 - 4:00 PDT

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The United States could be faced with a national health care crisis in the coming decades as the country's baby boomer population ages and a growing number of older adults find themselves diagnosed with and living longer with cancer.

That is the position of a team of researchers from across the country who believe current prevention measures, screening, treatments, and supportive care for older patients at risk of or dealing with cancer are lacking in the US.

In a special supplement issue of the international journal Cancerbeing released this month - Aging in the Context of Cancer Prevention and Control: Perspectives from Behavioral Health Medicine - the researchers say there is an urgent need for clear, evidence-based practice guidelines to assist physicians, oncologists and others who provide short- and long-term care management to older adults with cancer.

Only with more immediate research will proper prevention efforts, screening, treatment approaches, post-treatment survivorship and end of life care be put in place to serve this rapidly growing population, the experts say.

Consider these facts: "The coalescence of three factors has the potential to create one of the biggest public health problems our country has faced in decades," said Keith M. Bellizzi, a cancer survivorship researcher and assistant professor of human development and family studies at the University of Connecticut. "These are: the aging of the baby boomers, the age sensitive nature of cancer, and the increased survival for those diagnosed with cancer."

There is growing consensus, Bellizzi said, that researchers and clinicians will need to take a multidisciplinary approach to address this challenge incorporating perspectives from geriatrics, oncology, behavioral medicine, and public health.

"Further alarming are two recent reports which warn of a looming shortage of adult oncologists and geriatricians in the coming decades," said Bellizzi, one of the Cancer supplement's lead authors and a former scientist with the National Cancer Institute in Bethesda, MD. "Two pressing questions that need to be addressed are: 1) Who and how will we care for the growing population of older individuals with cancer, many of whom also will have competing health conditions, and 2) what are the unique physical, mental and social issues that they face. Regrettably, research has not kept pace with this growing population."

Here are some of the critical issues facing the country's growing population of older cancer survivors as presented in the special supplement:

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A full copy of the supplement can be found on the Internet at: http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/121542601/issue

The print publication will be available Dec. 15.

Lead Authors/Editors Contact Information:

Keith M. Bellizzi, Ph.D, MPH
Assistant Professor
Human Development and Family Studies
University of Connecticut
Storrs, Connecticut 06269-2058

Suzanne M. Miller, Ph.D
Director of Behavioral Research and the Psychosocial and Behavioral Medicine Program
Fox Chase Cancer Center
Philadelphia, PA 19111-2497

Deborah J. Bowen, Ph.D
Clinical Professor
Boston University
Cancer Prevention Research Program
Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center
Seattle, Washington 98109

Karen M. Mustian, Ph.D
Research Assistant Professor
NCI Biobehavioral Cancer Control Research Fellow
University of Rochester Cancer Center
Behavioral Medicine Unit
Rochester, NY 14642

Source: Colin Poitras
University of Connecticut

Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release.
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Colin Poitras. "Expected Surge In Older Cancer Survivors As Baby Boomers Age." Medical News Today. MediLexicon, Intl., 11 Dec. 2008. Web.
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