6749 Division of Community Health and Equity, Rhode Island Department of Health, Providence, RI, USA.
144103 Rhode Island Department of Corrections, Cranston, RI, USA.
Public Health Rep. 2021 Sep-Oct;136(5):548-553. doi: 10.1177/0033354920974668. Epub 2021 Feb 9.
Correctional facilities provide health care to large numbers of medically underserved people. As such, preventive health in correctional settings is an important yet underused investment in public health. Because they often have histories of poor access to health care, the justice-involved population is more likely than the general population to be diagnosed with advanced-stage cancers. We report on the first 2 years of an ongoing collaboration between a state correctional system and state health department to implement annual colorectal cancer screening for sentenced people using fecal immunochemical testing (FIT). Preparation for the annual iterations begins in January, and patient engagement begins in March. In the first year of implementation (2018), 1396 of 1856 (75.2%) sentenced people completed an eligibility screen, and 254 of 321 (79.1%) eligible patients completed a FIT (eligible patients were aged ≥50 [≥45 if Black] in year 1 [lowered to ≥45 in year 2] and reported no previous relevant medical or family history of colorectal cancer); 54 (21.3%) completed FITs were positive. Of the 54 patients with positive FITS, 33 (61.1%) completed follow-up colonoscopies resulting in the identification of polyps in 26 (48.1%) patients with a positive FIT. We found invasive adenocarcinoma for 2 (3.7%) of the positive FITs (6.1% of colonoscopies performed). In the second year (2019), after a conversion from paper to tablet-based eligibility screening, 1707 of 2059 (82.9%) sentenced people completed an eligibility screen, and 200 of 285 (70.2%) eligible patients completed a FIT, 27 (13.5%) of whom had a positive result. We share lessons learned about implementing mass screening to encourage further communication among departments of health and corrections to advance preventive health.
惩教机构为数以千计的医疗服务不足的人提供医疗保健。因此,惩教机构的预防保健是公共卫生领域一项重要但未得到充分利用的投资。由于他们往往难以获得医疗保健,因此与一般人群相比,涉及司法的人群更有可能被诊断出晚期癌症。我们报告了一个州惩教系统和州卫生部门之间正在进行的合作的前两年,该合作使用粪便免疫化学检测(FIT)为被判有罪的人实施年度结直肠癌筛查。每年迭代的准备工作从 1 月开始,患者参与从 3 月开始。在实施的第一年(2018 年),1856 名被判有罪的人中,有 1396 人完成了资格筛选,321 名符合条件的患者中有 254 人完成了 FIT(符合条件的患者在第 1 年年龄≥50 岁[黑人患者为≥45 岁],并且没有结直肠癌的相关医疗或家族史;54 人 FIT 呈阳性)。在 54 名 FIT 阳性患者中,有 33 人(61.1%)完成了随访结肠镜检查,在 26 名 FIT 阳性患者中发现了息肉(48.1%)。我们发现 2 名阳性 FIT 患者(6.1%的结肠镜检查)患有浸润性腺癌。在第二年(2019 年),在将纸质资格筛选转换为基于平板电脑的筛选后,2059 名被判有罪的人中,有 1707 人完成了资格筛选,285 名符合条件的患者中有 200 人完成了 FIT,其中 27 人(13.5%)结果阳性。我们分享了实施大规模筛查的经验教训,以鼓励卫生部门和惩教部门之间进一步沟通,促进预防保健。