• Military medicine · Feb 2024

    Multicenter Study

    Role of Unit Physicians and Challenges Encountered in the Follow-up of Military Personnel with Cancer.

    • Manon Lalande, Guillaume Vanderperre, Anne Périsse, Matthieu Patient, Emilie Roméo, Jean Sébastien Bladé, and Laurys Boudin.
    • Department of Oncology, Sainte Anne Military Teaching Hospital, Toulon 83000, France.
    • Mil Med. 2024 Feb 27; 189 (3-4): e848e853e848-e853.

    IntroductionGeneral practitioners (GPs) play a central role in the management and coordination of care of patients with malignant tumors and blood diseases. Civilian GPs encounter certain difficulties during the care of such patients. The practice of unit medicine in a military environment differs from that in a civilian context through expertise in fitness to serve and to deployment and the target population. We identified the difficulties encountered by "unit" physicians during and after cancer treatment.Materials And MethodsWe conducted a multicenter cross-sectional descriptive study from July 2, 2021, to September 30, 2022, targeting all military GPs belonging to the French Armed Forces Health Service. We sent a questionnaire consisting of 1 open- and 16 closed multiple-choice questions describing the population of unit physicians and their patients (questions 1-5), the difficulties encountered by physicians in the follow-up of military personnel with cancer (Questions 6, 7, 11, 12, and 13), and the potential information networks accessible to physicians (questions 8-10, 14, and 17).ResultsThree hundred and ninety physicians completed the questionnaires. Among the 700 military GPs, 390 physicians responded to the questionnaire and 327 completed it exhaustively. The questionnaire response rate was 55%. Of the responding physicians, 49% and 70% reported following patients with an "active" malignant tumor and a malignant tumor pathology in remission, respectively. Thirty-one percent of the physicians encountered difficulties with these patients as follows: 26% concerning fitness for duty, 17% in medical follow-up, 14% in addressing the psychological aspect, 11% concerning specialist accessibility for advice, 10% in managing deconditioning to effort, 9% in addressing the social aspect, 7% in medical management, and 6% concerning other issues.ConclusionsDifficulties in the follow-up of patients with cancer affect military doctors. They mainly concern fitness for duty and medical follow-up.© The Association of Military Surgeons of the United States 2023. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.

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