About the UVM Cancer Center

The University of Vermont (UVM) Cancer Center was founded in 1974. The cancer center is a not-for-profit organization administratively located at the Larner College of Medicine with clinical partnerships across the University of Vermont Health Network and beyond.

Mission

The mission of the University of Vermont Cancer Center is to reduce the burden of cancer in Vermont, northeastern New York and across northern New England, through research, outstanding clinical care, community outreach and education.

Vision

Working together, affiliated members, clinicians, scientists, and community stakeholders will be leaders in facilitating transdisciplinary discovery and achieving cancer health equity in northern New England.

The Four Pillars

The Cancer Center is a research institute, a clinical care facility, an educational entity and a community organization all in one. Our four pillars - research, clinical care, education, and community outreach - supports the mission of the Center -- to reduce the burden on cancer in the catchment area. 

The four pillars related to each other

Location & Facilities

The cancer center is an official administrative unit of UVM's Larner College of Medicine. Our clinicians enjoy a clinical partnership with the University of Vermont Medical Center. This flagship academic medical center includes an Ambulatory Care Center, an Education and Conference Center, and a cancer center clinical facility which allows integrated, multidisciplinary services for cancer diagnosis, outpatient treatment, and post-treatment follow up.

Communications

Innovations Newsletter 
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To receive a printed copy, email cancer@uvmcc.med.uvm.edu

Annual Report
2023 Annual Report | 2022 Annual Report

Patient Newsletter
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X: @UVMcancercenter
Facebook: @UVMCancerCenter

YouTube: Playlist

Contact Us

The University of Vermont Cancer Center
The Courtyard at Given
4th Floor North
89 Beaumont Avenue
Burlington, VT  05405

Clinical contact: (802) 847-8400.

Administrative contact:

Phone: (802) 656-4414
Fax: (802) 656-8788
Email: cancer@uvmcc.med.uvm.edu

New Study Introduces Novel Methodology to Benchmark Hospitals on In-Hospital Disparities

June 18, 2024 by Katelyn Queen, PhD

Elzerie de Jager, MBBS, PhD

Disparities in healthcare exist on a national, state, regional, and hospital level. With increased awareness of these disparities, many initiatives have been put in place to improve health equity. However, there is currently no consensus on how to measure disparities in healthcare, and disparity sensitive metrics have not been widely integrated into quality-assessment programs. A lack of disparity metrics makes it challenging to assess the impact of health equity initiatives on improving health equity over time. Now, new research from Elzerie de Jager, MBBS, PhD, in collaboration with leadership at the American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program, introduces a novel methodology to benchmark hospitals on in-hospital disparities in surgical care.

Utilizing the new methodology, the authors found that after risk adjustment fewer than 1.1% of the 657 hospitals in the study had demonstratable disparities in care. In contrast, prior to risk adjustment within-hospital disparities for socioeconomic status were detected in 25.8-99.8% of hospitals. This difference was likely due to the fact that the risk adjustment accounts for comorbidities which are higher in lower socioeconomic status populations. The results of this work indicate the need to consider other factors in disparity assessment, including risk adjustment methodology and healthcare segregation (differing access to healthcare institutions).  

This study was made possible through collaboration and mentoring by an astounding team of prominent senior investigators including leadership at the American College of Surgeons: the statistical manager, Mark Cohen, PhD, the director of quality, Clifford Ko, MD, MS, MSHS, FACS, and the past executive director, David Hoyt, MD, FACS. The leader of the project was L.D. Britt, MD, MPH, FACS, who, among many other accolades, is a past president of the American College of Surgeons. Having recently joined UVM as an Assistant Professor of Medicine, de Jager is eager to continue her health equity work here, collaborating with Erika Ziller, PhD, Director of the Health Services Research Center, and Yvonne Jonk, PhD, from the University of Southern Maine, to examine differences in trauma outcomes for patients residing in ambulance deserts (more than 25 minutes away from an ambulance station). In addition, de Jager has developed a 3-credit graduate health equity course which will be available to students in the fall. She is excited to contribute to the public health program and continue her health equity research at UVM.