Lofters Aisha K, Baker Natalie Alex, Corrado Ann Marie, Schuler Andree, Rau Allison, Baxter Nancy N, Leung Fok-Han, Weyman Karen, Kiran Tara
Peter Gilgan Centre for Women's Cancers, Women's College Hospital, Toronto, ON M5S 2B1, Canada.
MAP Centre for Urban Health Solutions, Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute, St. Michael's Hospital, 30 Bond Street, Toronto, ON M5B 1W8, Canada.
Prev Med Rep. 2021 Oct 25;24:101622. doi: 10.1016/j.pmedr.2021.101622. eCollection 2021 Dec.
Despite organized provincial cancer screening programs, people living with low income consistently have lower rates of screening in Ontario, Canada than their more socioeconomically advantaged peers. We previously published results of a two-phase, exploratory qualitative study involving both interviews and focus groups whose objective was to integrate knowledge of people living with low income on how to improve primary care strategies aimed at increasing cancer screening uptake. In the current paper, we report previously unpublished findings from that study that identify how taking a community outreach approach in primary care may lead to increased cancer screening uptake among people living with low income. Participants told us that they saw value in a community outreach approach to cancer screening. They recommended specific actionable approaches, in particular, mobile community-based screening and community information sessions, and recommended taking an ethno-specific lens depending on the communities being targeted. Participants expressed a desire for primary care providers to go out into the community to learn more about the whole patient, such as could be achieved with home visits, but they simultaneously believed that this may be challenging in urban settings and in the context of perceived physician shortages. Models of primary care that provide support to an entire local community and provide some of their services directly in that community may have a meaningful impact on cancer screening for socially marginalized groups.
尽管安大略省有组织的省级癌症筛查项目,但在加拿大安大略省,低收入人群的筛查率始终低于社会经济条件更优越的同龄人。我们之前发表了一项两阶段探索性定性研究的结果,该研究包括访谈和焦点小组,其目的是整合低收入人群关于如何改进旨在提高癌症筛查接受率的初级保健策略的知识。在当前论文中,我们报告了该研究中以前未发表的结果,这些结果确定了在初级保健中采用社区外展方法如何可能导致低收入人群的癌症筛查接受率提高。参与者告诉我们,他们认为社区外展癌症筛查方法有价值。他们推荐了具体可行的方法,特别是基于社区的流动筛查和社区信息交流会,并建议根据目标社区采用针对特定种族的视角。参与者表示希望初级保健提供者深入社区,更多地了解患者整体情况,比如通过家访来实现,但他们同时认为,在城市环境和存在医生短缺的情况下,这可能具有挑战性。为整个当地社区提供支持并直接在该社区提供部分服务的初级保健模式,可能会对社会边缘化群体的癌症筛查产生有意义的影响。