
10. Health Maintenance & Survivorship in Oncology
•Introduction
•Health maintenance for patients with cancer
•Secondary cancer risk and screening
•Exercise, nutrition, and sleep
•Anxiety, depression, trauma, and distress
•Survivorship
•Models of care
•Survivorship care plans
•Surveillance and follow-up
•Summary
Dallas Lawry (Moderator)
DNP, FNP-C, AOCNP
UC San Diego
Dallas earned her BSN fromCalifornia State University Channel Islands in 2014 and worked as an oncologynurse at UCLA Medical until 2021. That year, she completed her Family NursePractitioner and Doctor of Nursing Practice degrees at Loyola University NewOrleans. Her oncology experience spans inpatient, outpatient, infusion,clinical trials, liquid and solid tumors, palliative care, and hospice. Now atUC San Diego, she leads the diagnostic clinic for suspected pancreatic cancersand the survivorship clinic for pancreatic cancer patients, connecting them toclinical trials and guiding them through palliative care, hospice, and medicalaid in dying. She is published on chemotherapy hypersensitivity, upstreamsupportive care, and medical aid in dying and has received the Nurse Scientistof the Year award (UCLA, 2018) and the Nightingale Award (Loyola).
Dallas Lawry has the following relevant financial disclosures:
•Advisory Boards: Ipsen, BMS, Pfizer
•Speakers Bureau: Pfizer
•Non-profit: Canopy (authorship, Research Governance Committee Member), NCODA (speaker, Executive Council Member)
•Describe the domains of health maintenance in cancer survivorship.
•Describe what a cancer “survivor” is.
•Identify special considerations for cancer survivors when managing care.
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