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Changes in patient-sharing patterns after oncologist departures in rural and urban settings: a Medicare cohort study.

Applied network science 2026 Vol.11(1) p. 1

Cornelius SL, O'Malley AJ, Brooks GA, Tosteson ANA, Schaefer A, Moen EL

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[UNLABELLED] Cancer care relies on effective coordination within a multidisciplinary care team.

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APA Cornelius SL, O'Malley AJ, et al. (2026). Changes in patient-sharing patterns after oncologist departures in rural and urban settings: a Medicare cohort study.. Applied network science, 11(1), 1. https://doi.org/10.1007/s41109-025-00762-3
MLA Cornelius SL, et al.. "Changes in patient-sharing patterns after oncologist departures in rural and urban settings: a Medicare cohort study.." Applied network science, vol. 11, no. 1, 2026, pp. 1.
PMID 41509684

Abstract

[UNLABELLED] Cancer care relies on effective coordination within a multidisciplinary care team. Changes to teams due to departures remain understudied despite rising oncologist turnover in the United States. In this study, we aimed to investigate the impact of oncologist departures on the remaining care team members. We used Medicare claims associated with beneficiaries aged 66-99 to identify physicians involved in care for common cancer types (i.e., breast, lung, and colorectal cancer). We restricted our analysis to medical oncologists, radiation oncologists, and surgeons specializing in oncology (collectively, "oncologists"). We identified oncologists who left a practice location in 2017-2019 using the Medicare Carrier file and linked them to retained oncologists based on shared patients. Multivariable hierarchical linear regression was used to investigate how retained oncologists' patient-sharing patterns changed after a colleague's departure. Our results support that retained rural-practicing oncologists experienced an expansion and restructuring of their patient-sharing ties following oncologist departures while retained urban-practicing oncologists experienced a consolidation. Network restructuring may demonstrate an adaptive response that ensures patient continuity of care, but it may also reflect unique challenges faced by oncologists practicing in rural versus urban settings.

[SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION] The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s41109-025-00762-3.