Brady Laura A, Tumiel-Berhalter Laurene M, Schad Laura A, Bentham Alexandrea, Vitale Karen, Norton Amanda, Noronha Gary, Swanger Carlos, Morley Christopher P
Department of Family Medicine, State University of New York (SUNY) University at Buffalo, Buffalo, NY.
University at Buffalo Clinical and Translational Science Institute, Buffalo, NY.
J Patient Cent Res Rev. 2021 Oct 18;8(4):323-330. doi: 10.17294/2330-0698.1857. eCollection 2021 Fall.
Breast, cervical, and colorectal cancer screening rates are suboptimal in underserved populations. A 7-year quality improvement (QI) project implemented academic detailing and practice facilitation in safety-net primary care practices to increase cancer screening rates. This manuscript assesses barriers and promoters.
Primary care practices providing care to underserved patients were recruited in New York cities Buffalo, Rochester, and Syracuse. Enrollment totaled 31 practices, with 12 practices participating throughout. Annually, each practice received 6 months of practice facilitation support for development and implementation of evidence-based interventions to increase screening rates for the three cancer types. At the end of each practice facilitation period, focus groups and key informant interviews were conducted with participating personnel. Content analysis was performed annually to identify barriers and promoters. A comprehensive final analysis was performed at project end.
Barriers included system-level (inconsistent communication with specialists, electronic health record system transitions, ownership changes) and practice-level challenges (staff turnover, inconsistent data entry, QI fatigue) that compound patient-level challenges of transportation, cost, and health literacy. Cyclical barriers like staff turnover returned despite attempts to resolve them, while successful implementation was promoted by reducing patients' structural barriers, adapting interventions to existing practice priorities, and enacting officewide policies. During the QI project, practices became aware of the impact of social determinants of health on patients' screening decisions.
The project's longitudinal design enabled identification of key barriers that reduced accuracy of practices' screening rates and increased risk of patients falling through the cracks. Identified promoters can help sustain interventions to increase screenings.
在医疗服务不足的人群中,乳腺癌、宫颈癌和结直肠癌的筛查率未达最佳水平。一项为期7年的质量改进(QI)项目在安全网初级保健机构中实施了学术指导和实践促进措施,以提高癌症筛查率。本论文评估了其中的障碍和促进因素。
在纽约州的布法罗、罗切斯特和锡拉丘兹市招募了为医疗服务不足患者提供护理的初级保健机构。共有31家机构参与,其中12家全程参与。每年,每家机构都会获得6个月的实践促进支持,以制定和实施基于证据的干预措施,提高这三种癌症的筛查率。在每个实践促进阶段结束时,与参与人员进行焦点小组讨论和关键信息人访谈。每年进行内容分析以确定障碍和促进因素。在项目结束时进行全面的最终分析。
障碍包括系统层面的问题(与专科医生沟通不一致、电子健康记录系统转换、所有权变更)和实践层面的挑战(人员流动、数据录入不一致、质量改进疲劳),这些问题加剧了患者层面的交通、成本和健康素养等挑战。尽管试图解决,但人员流动等周期性障碍仍然存在,而通过减少患者的结构性障碍、使干预措施适应现有实践重点以及制定全办公室政策,促进了成功实施。在质量改进项目期间,各机构意识到健康的社会决定因素对患者筛查决策的影响。
该项目的纵向设计能够识别出关键障碍,这些障碍降低了机构筛查率的准确性,并增加了患者被遗漏的风险。已确定的促进因素有助于维持提高筛查率的干预措施。