If you’ve been diagnosed with cancer, you likely have questions. Oncology navigators offer answers and more. Also called patient navigators or oncology navigators, these caring experts walk alongside cancer patients throughout their cancer journeys.
“Navigating a complex health-care system can be a barrier to care,” says Dr. Erica Phillips, internal medicine physician at Weill Cornell Medicine, associate director of Community Outreach and Engagement at the Sandra and Edward Meyer Cancer Center and co-associate director of Community Engagement at the Cornell Center for Health Equity. “That’s why patient navigators were developed.”
Patient Navigators Break Down Barriers
A key task that oncology patient navigators perform is helping you overcome barriers to receiving cancer care. These health disparities may show up at any point along your care journey, from cancer diagnosis and treatment to recovery and beyond.
A few barriers noted by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention include:
Your Point of Contact Throughout the Cancer Journey
Today, cancer care relies on a multidisciplinary team to cover all areas of your health—physical, emotional, mental and spiritual. When you have questions or concerns along your journey, your oncology patient navigator can connect you to the right member of your care team. Your navigator can even contact a team member on your behalf.
“Patient navigators are intimately familiar with communities being impacted by increased rates of cancer,” Dr. Phillips says, “because they themselves are from those communities.”
Your navigator speaks your language and empowers you to stay connected and informed in other meaningful ways. A few ways patient navigators do this include:
Working with an oncology navigator does more than just clear obstacles and explain your diagnosis—it improves your care. Research shows this partnership reduces the time from diagnosis to treatment and helps you stay on track with your treatment plan. By bridging the gap between you and your care team, navigators provide the confidence and support that lead to better outcomes and longer survival.
In Conclusion
A cancer diagnosis brings a lot of questions. With an oncology patient navigator, you can get answers and much more.
There’s a lot more to learn about cancer care and other areas of medicine. Here’s What We Know so far.