Overview
- Editors:
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Lillie D. Shockney
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Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, USA
- Provides expertise of members of the Leadership Council of the Academy of Oncology Nurse & Patient Navigators
- Describes comprehensively how to develop and implement an oncology navigation program
- Includes all facets of navigation, from community outreach to long-term survivorship/end-of-life navigation
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Table of contents (17 chapters)
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- Linda Burhansstipanov, Lillie D. Shockney
Pages 1-11
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- Linda Burhansstipanov, Lillie D. Shockney, Sharon Gentry
Pages 13-42
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- Mandi Pratt-Chapman, Linda Burhansstipanov, Lillie D. Shockney
Pages 63-83
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- Danelle Johnston, Tricia Strusowski, Cheryl Bellomo, Linda Burhansstipanov
Pages 85-110
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- Linda Fleisher, Emily Gentry, Evelyn Gonzalez, Andrea Tillman
Pages 111-124
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- Margaret Rummel, Paula Sanborn, Penny Daugherty
Pages 125-147
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- Linda Burhansstipanov, Lillie D. Shockney
Pages 149-176
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- Pamela Goetz, Jennifer R. Klemp
Pages 177-195
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- Sharon Gentry, Linda Burhansstipanov
Pages 251-274
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- Elizabeth F. Franklin, Linda House, Elizabeth Glidden
Pages 275-290
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- Elaine Sein, Danelle Johnston, Tricia Strusowski, Cheryl Bellomo
Pages 291-314
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- Mandi Pratt-Chapman, Linda Burhansstipanov
Pages 315-334
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- Emily Gentry, Lillie D. Shockney
Pages 335-349
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Back Matter
Pages 367-368
About this book
This book discusses how effective navigation requires a team approach to oncology care and should never be considered an “add-on” resource or service. The Academy of Oncology Nurse & Patient Navigators (AONN) is the only national professional organization for navigation professionals, and has more than 6,000 members, 90% of which are oncology nurse navigators. They are the experts on creating team-based programs, which remove the risk of others trying to reinvent the wheel by designing a navigation program from scratch. They also understand the role of effective navigation across the entire continuum of care, and understand and are able to apply other key aspects of navigation, including clinical trial screenings and tumor board coordination and monitoring, as well as measurement using evidence-based navigation metrics, to name but a few.It is the only book designed to educate and support anyone developing a new navigation program, or wanting to improve one they have created.
As such it offers a guide for cancer centers needing to develop and implement an oncology navigation program; understand and successfully meet and exceed the Commission on Cancer accreditation standards linked to navigation; expand or improve their current navigation program as well as demonstrate its value using reliable measurable results, including patient satisfaction and improved- quality clinical outcomes. This comprehensive book also provides insights into applying the information presented to the real world of oncology care.
Editors and Affiliations
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Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, USA
Lillie D. Shockney
About the editor
Lillie D. Shockney is a professor of surgery and oncology as well as having been appointed by the Dean of the School of Medicine and the President of the University to a faculty chair (University Distinguished Service Professor of Breast Cancer at Johns Hopkins). She is a registered nurse with a BS in healthcare administration and a master’s degree in administrative science from Johns Hopkins University, and her employment began at Hopkins in 1983. She serves as the director of the breast center and the director of cancer survivorship programs for the cancer center. Professor Shockney is the founder and program director of the Academy of Oncology Nurse & Patient Navigators (AONN+). She has received 52 awards—46 national and 6 state awards, including being inducted into the Maryland Women Hall of Fame and recipient of the Johnson & Johnson Most Amazing Nurse in America. Well known for her public speaking and literary work, she has published 14 prior books and more than 275 articles on breast cancer, cancer navigation, survivorship care, metastatic breast cancer, and patient advocacy.