At some point during or after treatment, breast cancer may be considered a chronic illness, presenting many choices for managing
the disease, its adverse treatment-related effects, other medical comorbidities as well as the biobehavioral burden of having a lifethreatening
disease, even for individuals with potentially curable breast cancer. Health care models, such as the chronic care model,
the medical home, and the shared care model, provide a context for building survivorship health care models. Goals and characteristics
of recently proposed shared care models for cancer survivorship health care delivery closely align with the goals and concepts of
the prospective surveillance model (PSM) proposed elsewhere in this supplement to the journal Cancer. Given these similarities, along
with the growth and expansion of survivorship care models and impending mandates for delivery, there is merit to considering how
implementation of the PSM can be integrated with models of survivorship care delivery. The PSM model will likely face many similar
challenges and barriers that have impeded widespread dissemination of other survivorship models of care. There exist opportunities
to integrate lessons learned as well as to align efforts to achieve greater impact on the shared goal of improving health outcomes for
breast cancer survivors