Department of Behavioral Science, University of Kentucky, Markey Cancer Center, Center for Health Equity Transformation, Lexington, Kentucky.
Department of Social Sciences and Health Policy, Wake Forest School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, North Carolina.
Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev. 2021 Apr;30(4):669-675. doi: 10.1158/1055-9965.EPI-20-1157. Epub 2020 Dec 21.
Cancer-related financial hardship is associated with poor care outcomes and reduced quality of life for patients and families. Scalable intervention development to address financial hardship requires knowledge of current screening practices and services within community cancer care.
The NCI Community Oncology Research Program (NCORP) 2017 Landscape Assessment survey assessed financial screening and financial navigation practices within U.S. community oncology practices. Logistic models evaluated associations between financial hardship screening and availability of a cancer-specific financial navigator and practice group characteristics (e.g., safety-net designation, critical access hospital, proportion of racial and ethnic minority patients served).
Of 221 participating NCORP practice groups, 72% reported a financial screening process and 50% had a cancer-specific financial navigator. Practice groups with more than 10% of new patients with cancer enrolled in Medicaid (OR = 2.81, = 0.02) and with less than 30% racial/ethnic minority cancer patient composition (OR = 3.91, < 0.01) were more likely to screen for financial concerns. Practice groups with less than 30% racial/ethnic minority cancer patient composition (OR = 2.37, < 0.01) were more likely to have a dedicated financial navigator or counselor for patients with cancer.
Most NCORP practice groups screen for financial concerns and half have a cancer-specific financial navigator. Practices serving more racial or ethnic minority patients are less likely to screen and have a designated financial navigator.
The effectiveness of financial screening and navigation for mitigating financial hardship could be tested within NCORP, along with specific interventions to address cancer care inequities..
癌症相关的经济困难与患者和家庭的治疗效果不佳以及生活质量下降有关。为了解决经济困难问题,需要开发可扩展的干预措施,而这需要了解社区癌症护理中当前的筛查实践和服务。
美国国家癌症研究所社区肿瘤学研究计划(NCORP)2017 年景观评估调查评估了美国社区肿瘤学实践中的财务筛查和财务导航实践。逻辑模型评估了财务困难筛查与癌症特定财务导航员的可用性以及实践群体特征(例如,安全网指定、关键接入医院、服务的种族和少数民族患者比例)之间的关联。
在参与 NCORP 实践组的 221 个中,有 72%报告了财务筛选过程,有 50%有癌症特定的财务导航员。有超过 10%的新癌症患者参加医疗补助计划的实践组(OR=2.81,p=0.02)和有不到 30%的种族/族裔少数民族癌症患者构成的实践组(OR=3.91,p<0.01)更有可能筛查财务问题。有不到 30%的种族/族裔少数民族癌症患者构成的实践组(OR=2.37,p<0.01)更有可能为癌症患者提供专门的财务导航员或顾问。
大多数 NCORP 实践组都会筛查财务问题,其中一半有癌症特定的财务导航员。服务于更多少数民族患者的实践组不太可能进行筛查,也没有指定的财务导航员。
NCORP 可以测试财务筛查和导航对于减轻经济困难的有效性,以及针对癌症护理不公平问题的具体干预措施。