Farrell Christopher L, Ginzburg Melanie R, Enlow Morgan B, Jenkins Missouri M, Hames Alexus N, Adams Cayla R, Roberts Marlana A, Stamps Hillary E, Paxton Natalie A, Addison Courtney N, Shull Austin Y
Department of Pharmaceutical and Administrative Sciences, Presbyterian College School of Pharmacy, Clinton, South Carolina.
Department of Biology, Presbyterian College, Clinton, South Carolina.
medRxiv. 2025 Mar 26:2025.03.25.25324513. doi: 10.1101/2025.03.25.25324513.
Rural versus urban communities experience disproportionate challenges in breast cancer outcomes, with higher breast cancer mortality and later stage disease presentation, despite similar diagnosis rates. These disparities are driven by structural barriers, including rural hospital closures, transportation difficulties, and limited access to oncology specialists. This study evaluated a train-the-trainer program designed to equip PharmD students located at a pharmacy school in a rural county in South Carolina with breast cancer education training, leveraging the pharmacists' position as accessible healthcare professionals in rural communities. Training focused on breast cancer risk factors, prevention, screening, genetics, staging, and treatment options. Effectiveness was measured through pre- and post-workshop confidence surveys and knowledge assessments. Results showed significant improvement in student confidence across educational domains, with average scores increasing from 6.30 to 8.59 (p<0.0001). Understanding of screening guidelines (mean difference: 4.30; p-value: <.0001) and target therapy options showed the greatest improvement (mean difference: 3.65; p-value: <.0001), while knowledge of BRCA gene inheritance showed the smallest change (mean difference: 0.369; p-value: ns), suggesting some pre-existing awareness but limited understanding of its clinical applications. Overall, this pilot program demonstrates how pharmacy education can address healthcare disparities in rural communities. By preparing pharmacists to deliver accurate breast cancer education and to increase rural patient agency, this model creates a sustainable approach to improving health literacy in medically underserved areas. Future research could further expand this model to include diverse healthcare professionals and incorporate long-term impact assessments in community settings.
农村社区与城市社区在乳腺癌治疗结果上面临着不成比例的挑战,尽管诊断率相似,但农村地区乳腺癌死亡率更高,疾病确诊时分期也更晚。这些差异是由结构性障碍导致的,包括农村医院关闭、交通困难以及肿瘤专科医生数量有限。本研究评估了一项培训培训师计划,该计划旨在为南卡罗来纳州一个农村县的药学院药学博士学生提供乳腺癌教育培训,利用药剂师作为农村社区中容易接触到的医疗保健专业人员的地位。培训内容集中在乳腺癌风险因素、预防、筛查、遗传学、分期和治疗选择。通过工作坊前后的信心调查和知识评估来衡量培训效果。结果显示,学生在各个教育领域的信心有显著提高,平均得分从6.30提高到8.59(p<0.0001)。对筛查指南的理解(平均差异:4.30;p值:<.0001)和靶向治疗选择方面的提高最为显著(平均差异:3.65;p值:<.0001),而对BRCA基因遗传的知识变化最小(平均差异:0.369;p值:无统计学意义),这表明学生此前已有一定认识,但对其临床应用的理解有限。总体而言,这个试点项目展示了药学教育如何能够解决农村社区的医疗保健差异问题。通过让药剂师做好准备,提供准确的乳腺癌教育并增强农村患者的自我管理能力,该模式创造了一种在医疗服务不足地区提高健康素养的可持续方法。未来的研究可以进一步扩展这个模式,纳入更多样化的医疗保健专业人员,并在社区环境中纳入长期影响评估。