Northport Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Northport, New York 11768, USA.
Cancer. 2013 Aug 1;119 Suppl 15:2894-904. doi: 10.1002/cncr.28156.
One of 5 nationally funded Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Colorectal Cancer (CRC) Screening Demonstration Programs, Project SCOPE, was conducted at an academic medical center and provided colonoscopy screening at no cost to underserved minority patients from local community health centers.
Established barriers to CRC screening (eg, financial, language, transportation) among the target population were addressed through clinical coordination of care by key project staff. The use of a clinician with a patient navigator allowed for the performance of precolonoscopy "telephone visits" instead of office visits to the gastroenterologist in virtually all patients. The clinician elicited information relevant to making screening decisions (eg, past medical and surgical history, focused review of systems, medication/supplement use, CRC screening history). The patient navigator reduced barriers, including, but not limited to, scheduling, transportation, and physical navigation of the medical center on the day of colonoscopy.
Preprogram preparation was vital in laying groundwork for the project, yet enhancements to the program were ongoing throughout the screening period. Detailed referral forms from primary care physicians, coupled with information obtained during telephone interviews, facilitated high colonoscopy completion rates and excellent patient satisfaction. Similarly valuable was the employment of a bilingual patient navigator, who provided practical and emotional patient support.
Academic medical centers can be efficient models for providing CRC screening to disadvantaged populations. Coordination of care by a preventive medicine department, directing the recruitment, scheduling, prescreening education, and the evaluation and preparation of target populations had an overall positive effect on CRC screening with colonoscopy among patients from a community health center.
作为全国五个疾病预防控制中心(CDC)大肠癌(CRC)筛查示范项目之一,SCOPE 项目在一家学术医疗中心开展,为当地社区健康中心的服务不足的少数族裔患者提供免费的结肠镜筛查。
通过主要项目工作人员对护理的临床协调,解决了目标人群中大肠癌筛查的既定障碍(例如财务、语言、交通)。临床医生与患者导航员合作,允许对几乎所有患者进行结肠镜检查前的“电话访问”,而不是预约看胃肠病专家。临床医生获取与决策筛查相关的信息(例如,过去的医疗和手术史、系统的重点回顾、药物/补充剂的使用、CRC 筛查史)。患者导航员减少了障碍,包括但不限于预约、交通和结肠镜检查当天在医疗中心的实际导航。
项目前的准备工作对于项目的开展至关重要,但在整个筛查期间,项目仍在不断改进。初级保健医生的详细转诊表,加上电话访谈中获得的信息,促进了结肠镜检查的高完成率和患者的高度满意度。同样有价值的是雇用一名双语患者导航员,为患者提供实际和情感上的支持。
学术医疗中心可以成为为弱势群体提供 CRC 筛查的有效模式。预防医学部门的护理协调,指导招募、安排、预筛教育以及目标人群的评估和准备,对社区健康中心患者的结肠镜 CRC 筛查产生了整体积极的影响。