1 School of Public Health, Cancer Center, Center for Research on Women and Gender, University of Illinois at Chicago , Chicago, Illinois.
2 School of Public Health, University of Illinois at Chicago , Chicago, Illinois.
J Womens Health (Larchmt). 2018 Mar;27(3):317-323. doi: 10.1089/jwh.2016.6120. Epub 2017 Sep 21.
Past efforts to assess patient navigation on cancer screening utilization have focused on one-time uptake, which may not be sufficient in the long term. This is partially due to limited resources for in-person, longitudinal patient navigation. We examine the effectiveness of a low-intensity phone- and mail-based navigation on multiple screening episodes with a focus on screening uptake after receiving noncancerous results during a previous screening episode.
The is a secondary analysis of patients who participated in a randomized controlled patient navigation trial in Chicago. Participants include women referred for a screening mammogram, aged 50-74 years, and with a history of benign/normal screening results. Navigation services focused on identification of barriers and intervention via shared decision-making processes. A multivariable logistic regression intent-to-treat model was used to examine differences in odds of obtaining a screening mammogram within 2 years of the initial mammogram (yes/no) between navigated and non-navigated women. Sensitivity analyses were conducted to explore patterns across subsets of participants (e.g., navigated women successfully contacted before the initial appointment; women receiving care at Hospital C).
The final sample included 2,536 women (741 navigated, 1,795 non-navigated). Navigated women exhibited greater odds of obtaining subsequent screenings relative to women in the standard care group in adjusted models and analyses including women who received navigation before the initial appointment.
Our findings suggest that low-intensity navigation services can improve follow-up screening among women who receive a noncancerous result. Further investigation is needed to confirm navigation's impacts on longitudinal screening.
过去评估癌症筛查利用方面的患者导航效果的努力集中在一次性参与度上,而这在长期内可能是不够的。这部分是由于患者导航的面对面、纵向服务资源有限。我们研究了基于电话和邮件的低强度导航在多次筛查中的有效性,重点是在之前的筛查中收到非癌性结果后的筛查参与度。
这是芝加哥一项随机对照患者导航试验参与者的二次分析。参与者包括因筛查性乳房 X 光检查而被转诊的、年龄在 50-74 岁之间且有良性/正常筛查结果史的女性。导航服务侧重于通过共同决策过程来识别障碍和进行干预。使用多变量逻辑回归意向治疗模型来检查在初始乳房 X 光检查后 2 年内获得乳房 X 光筛查的可能性(是/否)在接受和未接受导航的女性之间的差异。进行敏感性分析以探索参与者子集(例如,在初始预约前成功联系的接受导航的女性;在医院 C 接受护理的女性)之间的模式。
最终样本包括 2536 名女性(741 名接受导航,1795 名未接受导航)。在调整后的模型和包括在初始预约前接受导航的女性的分析中,与标准护理组的女性相比,接受导航的女性随后获得筛查的可能性更高。
我们的研究结果表明,低强度导航服务可以提高接受非癌性结果的女性的后续筛查参与度。需要进一步研究来确认导航对纵向筛查的影响。