Division of General Internal Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
UCLA Kaiser Permanent Center for Health Equity, UCLA Center for Cancer Prevention and Control Research, Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center, Los Angeles, California, USA.
Cancer Med. 2024 Aug;13(15):e70040. doi: 10.1002/cam4.70040.
At-home colorectal cancer (CRC) screening is an effective way to reduce CRC mortality, but screening rates in medically underserved groups are low. To plan the implementation of a pragmatic randomized trial comparing two population-based outreach approaches, we conducted qualitative research on current processes and barriers to at-home CRC screening in 10 community health centers (CHCs) that serve medically underserved groups, four each in Massachusetts and California, and two tribal facilities in South Dakota.
We conducted 53 semi-structured interviews with clinical and administrative staff at the participating CHCs. Participants were asked about CRC screening processes, categorized into eight domains: patient identification, outreach, risk assessment, fecal immunochemical test (FIT) workflows, FIT-DNA (i.e., Cologuard) workflows, referral for a follow-up colonoscopy, patient navigation, and educational materials. Transcripts were analyzed using a Rapid Qualitative Analysis approach. A matrix was used to organize and summarize the data into four sub-themes: current process, barriers, facilitators, and solutions to adapt materials for the intervention.
Each site's process for stool-based CRC screening varied slightly. Interviewees identified the importance of offering educational materials in English and Spanish, using text messages to remind patients to return kits, adapting materials to address health literacy needs so patients can access instructions in writing, pictures, or video, creating mailed workflows integrated with a tracking system, and offering patient navigation to colonoscopy for patients with an abnormal result.
Proposed solutions across the three regions will inform a multilevel intervention in a pragmatic trial to increase CRC screening uptake in CHCs.
家庭结直肠癌(CRC)筛查是降低 CRC 死亡率的有效方法,但在医疗服务不足的人群中,筛查率较低。为了计划实施一项实用的随机试验,比较两种基于人群的外展方法,我们对 10 家服务于医疗服务不足人群的社区卫生中心(CHC)中当前的家庭 CRC 筛查流程和障碍进行了定性研究,其中马萨诸塞州和加利福尼亚州各有 4 家,南达科他州有 2 家部落设施。
我们对参与 CHC 的临床和行政人员进行了 53 次半结构化访谈。参与者被问及 CRC 筛查流程,分为八个领域:患者识别、外展、风险评估、粪便免疫化学检测(FIT)工作流程、FIT-DNA(即 Cologuard)工作流程、推荐进行后续结肠镜检查、患者导航和教育材料。使用快速定性分析方法对转录本进行分析。使用矩阵将数据组织和总结为四个子主题:当前流程、障碍、促进因素和适应干预措施的材料的解决方案。
每个地点的基于粪便的 CRC 筛查流程略有不同。受访者认为提供英语和西班牙语教育材料、使用短信提醒患者归还试剂盒、适应材料以满足健康素养需求,以便患者可以书面、图片或视频形式获取说明、创建与跟踪系统集成的邮寄工作流程以及为异常结果的患者提供结肠镜检查患者导航非常重要。
三个地区提出的解决方案将为实用试验中提高 CHC 中 CRC 筛查参与度的多层次干预提供信息。