Cancer Rehabilitation Research
Demonstrating the value of cancer rehabilitation
It is our privilege to do our part to move the science of cancer rehabilitation forward.
Our goal is to conduct research to determine the value of cancer rehabilitation in achieving the quadruple aim of better patient health and experience and decreased total cost and clinician burden.
Our research team is actively partnering with independent oncology practices and academic medical centers on several research initiatives aligned with value-based oncology care.
The following are select publications from the ReVital team.
Full-text articles
- Impact of Real-World Outpatient Cancer Rehabilitation Services on Health-Related Quality of Life of Cancer Survivors across 12 Diagnosis Types in the United States
- Cancer rehabilitation services for older women with breast cancer: Impact on health-related quality of life outcomes
- Cancer Rehabilitation: Impact on Breast Cancer Survivors’ Work Ability and Health-Related Quality of Life
- Geriatric assessment-identified impairments and frailty in adults with cancer younger than 65: An opportunity to optimize oncology care
- Understanding Patient Experience with Outpatient Cancer Rehabilitation Care
- Community-based outpatient rehabilitation for the treatment of breast cancer-related upper extremity disability: An evaluation of practice-based evidence
Abstracts presented at major oncology conferences
- Effects of prehab or rehabilitation on upper extremity disability and quality of life after breast cancer surgery
- Using an electronic capture geriatric assessment to guide rehabilitation triage for adults with cancer during systemic therapy.
- Is ECOG-PS ≥3 appropriate to guide rehabilitation referral decisions? Using patient-reported outcome measures to examine the prevalence of functional disability in patients with ECOG-PS 0-2.
For research and professional collaborative requests, email Kelley Wood, director of research, at [email protected].