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Integrating cancer rehabilitation and lifestyle medicine: a proposed partnership and case example from the RISE cancer survivorship clinic

  • Alix G. Sleight
  • , Stephen B. Weschler
  • , Jennifer M. Jones
  • , Kelley C. Wood
  • , Mackenzi Pergolotti
  • , Courtney P. Williams
  • , Rachelle S. Brick
  • , Sarah Lyon
  • , Aneesha Virani
  • , Sandy C. Takata
  • , Kathleen D. Lyons
  • , Maria C. Swartz
  • , Yoko E. Fukumura
  • , Pamela S. Roberts
  • , Elizabeth P. Frates

Research output: Contribution to journalComment/debatepeer-review

Abstract

Purpose: Cancer mortality is associated with modifiable health behaviors such as physical activity, alcohol intake, and diet; however, it is estimated that only 5-25% of cancer survivors adhere to health behavior recommendations after diagnosis. With the overburdened infrastructure of healthcare in the United States and the high out-of-pocket expenditures for cancer patients, it is challenging for cancer survivors to access personalized lifestyle medicine in many settings. Materials and Methods: In this Perspective, an interdisciplinary team of cancer rehabilitation and lifestyle medicine clinicians outline the potential for synergy between the two fields to illustrate the possibilities for improvement in cancer care when the two disciplines are integrated. Results: We outline key concepts and present a case example from Re-invent, Integrate, Strengthen, Expand (RISE), an occupational therapy-based cancer survivorship clinic employing the tenets of lifestyle medicine in a major urban medical center in the United States. Conclusion: Cancer rehabilitation clinicians are uniquely situated to collaborate with lifestyle medicine clinicians in the assessment of lifestyle-related issues and interventions designed to mitigate these issues. The RISE cancer survivorship clinic provides a practical, real-life example of this collaboration in action. Cancer care throughout the continuum may benefit from an increase in synergistic activities between these two professional domains.

Original languageEnglish (US)
JournalDisability and Rehabilitation
DOIs
StateAccepted/In press - 2026
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Cancer
  • health behaviors
  • lifestyle
  • oncology
  • rehabilitation

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Rehabilitation

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