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Editor-in-Chief
Amy Colver, MSSA, MA, LISW

Editor
Katherine Easton, MSW, LCSW, OSW-C

AOSW Communications Director
Brittany Hahn, LCSW

Managing Editor
Patricia Sullivan

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2025 Themes

February: Workplace & Culture
May: Therapeutic Techniques

August: Palliative Care

November: Caregivers 

Aligning Oncology Social Work and Patient Navigation to Broaden Our Scope and Sustainability  

May 12, 2025
Therapeutic Techniques

By Karen Costello, MSS, LSW, OSW-C
AOSW Advocacy Director and Patient Navigation SIG Co-Lead

Social workers serve a unique role on the cancer care team. We are knowledgeable about cancer and the psychosocial effects of disease, treatment, and survivorship. We are also educated in theories that provide us with evidence-based frameworks for context and intervention. We develop specific skills over time to properly assess the clinical picture in a way that provides a perspective that only we can offer.  

Our patients and caregivers rely on our skills to help them navigate a cancer diagnosis, including their treatment plan and systems that provide their care. Our organizations, agencies, and teams rely on us to bring clinical navigation expertise with us each day to the work and those we serve. 

It is important for us to identify navigation as a core aspect of the psychosocial care we provide patients and caregivers in oncology. Aligning the standards of practice for oncology social workers and navigators is a helpful way to understand the interrelated nature of social work and navigation. The purpose of this article is to orient oncology social workers to two important papers so that they can serve as professional development resources.  

The AOSW Standards of Practice outlines expectations and the commitment oncology social workers collectively demonstrate in their work with patients, families, and caregivers. This is the heart of our work as social workers. In addition, we consistently act in service to our employer institutions and agencies – we are often the primary psychosocial experts on the team and carry the knowledge about our patients’ ability to cope with cancer by providing resources and support to improve access and outcomes.  

The AOSW Standards of Practice also focuses on communities. We interface with the cancer landscape as we conduct research in our field as well as promote programs and services in the communities in which our patients and caregivers live. We strive to make these community services more accessible for everyone.  

We also have a commitment to our profession. One aspect is to ensure that students receive proper training and mentoring. We participate in professional associations like AOSW and we strive to keep current in the knowledge base of our field as well as serve as expert presenters to drive the learning for the generations of social workers coming up through the ranks.  

The Professional Oncology Navigation Taskforce (PONT) released its own standards of practice, which are a set of guidelines to promote high-quality patient navigation. These standards were published in 2022 as a response to the Cancer Moonshot/Biden Cancer Initiative that focused on the need for navigation in cancer care. This formative paper provides definitions for the types of navigators, including social workers, as well as scope of practice standards by each type of navigator. With these standards, navigators know that the needs of patients and caregivers are met in a way that is appropriate while they work at the top of their clinical scope of practice. The standards highlight the guidelines in areas such as psychosocial assessment and the provision of evidence-based care, which are hallmarks of social work practice. They also highlight leadership and evaluation and quality improvement areas that might be learning areas for some social workers. In these standards, social workers can demonstrate mastery of skills as well as professional development (Franklin, E., Burke, S., Dean, M., Johnston, D., Nevidjon, B., Sims, LB 2022).  

The navigation standards are also important as they provide professional momentum, which led to establishing billing codes and reimbursement for navigation services in cancer care. I’ve shared resources below for learning more about funding models for navigation sustainability. 

For both oncology social work and navigation, the scope and standards align the professions around themes of service, knowledge, education and competence, social justice, and health equity. Importantly, social workers possess the education, skills, and expertise to provide navigation services in cancer care and this alignment will promote sustainability in our profession which ultimately means we can serve more patients and caregivers. Both standards of practice serve to solidify our professional presence in the oncology workforce and demonstrate the scope and depth of our work. 

Resources 

References 

Association of Oncology Social Work. Scope and Standards of Practice. https://aosw.org/resources/scope-and-standards-of-practice/ 

The Professional Oncology Navigation Task Force. Oncology Navigation Standards of Professional Practice. https://jons-online.com/issues/2022/march-2022-vol-13-no-3/4399-oncology-navigation-standards-of-professional-practice 

 

About the Author

Karen Costello, MSS, LSW, OSW-C
Strategic Director, ACS National Navigation Roundtable (NNRT)
American Cancer Society
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Karen.Costello@cancer.org
Karen Costello, MSS, LSW, OSW-C, received her master’s degree in social work and social services from Bryn Mawr Graduate School of Social Work and Social Research in 1996. Karen is a licensed social worker in the state of Pennsylvania and has the ...
Karen Costello, MSS, LSW, OSW-C
Strategic Director, ACS National Navigation Roundtable (NNRT)
American Cancer Society
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Karen.Costello@cancer.org

Karen Costello, MSS, LSW, OSW-C, received her master’s degree in social work and social services from Bryn Mawr Graduate School of Social Work and Social Research in 1996. Karen is a licensed social worker in the state of Pennsylvania and has the Oncology Social Work certification from the Board of Oncology Social Work (BOSW).  Karen is also American Cancer Society, Leadership in Oncology Navigation (ACS LION) credentialed since 2024.

She has 30 years of oncology experience as a clinic coordinator, social worker, navigator and administrator in academic cancer centers and hospitals and non-profit patient advocacy organizations.

Karen began her social work career with the blood and marrow transplantation team at Abramson Cancer Center of the University of Pennsylvania. After that, Karen joined The Leukemia & Lymphoma Society first as a patient services manager and then as an executive director. In 2009, back at the Abramson Cancer Center of Penn she became a cancer center administrator with a variety of Penns Cancer Network hospitals in the surrounding community. Then with Penn Radiation Oncology, Karen became the practice administrator for several busy clinical practices. In 2019, Karen returned to the cancer advocacy space to become a lead navigator at Cancer Support Community’s headquarters. There she built the existing patient navigation program available to patients and caregivers located on the organizations’ Helpline. In February 2025, Karen became the Strategic Director for the American Cancer Society’s National Navigation Roundtable where she works alongside 200+ oncology navigation professionals shaping policy, practice and development for the field.