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一项由社区卫生工作者推动的综合交互式短信干预措施,旨在提高高危亚洲移民的戒烟率和肺癌筛查参与率:一项可行性试点随机对照试验研究。

A Community Health Worker-driven and integrated interactive text messaging intervention to promote smoking cessation and lung cancer screening uptake rates among high-risk Asian immigrants: a feasibility pilot RCT study.

作者信息

Wen Kuang-Yi, Barta Julie, Liang Jessica, Koh KyungHee, No Rebecca, Zhu Steven, Li Kailin, Shusted Christine, Juon Hee-Soon

机构信息

Department of Medical Oncology, Thomas Jefferson University, 834 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, PA 19107, USA.

Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Department of Medicine, Thomas Jefferson University, 211 South 9th Street, Philadelphia, PA 19107, USA.

出版信息

Transl Behav Med. 2025 Jan 16;15(1). doi: 10.1093/tbm/ibaf018.

Abstract

INTRODUCTION

Lung cancer is a leading cause of cancer mortality among Asian-Americans. Despite the potential of lung cancer screening (LCS) to detect disease at an earlier stage and reduce mortality, the uptake of LCS remains low. This is particularly concerning among Asian subgroups with high smoking prevalence. Additionally, there are scarce intervention programs tailored specifically for Asian-Americans. The purpose of this pilot study was to develop and evaluate the Connect4LungHealth intervention to enhance LCS adoption and promote smoking cessation in high-risk Chinese and Korean communities via a Community-Health Worker (CHW)-driven approach integrated with mobile text messaging (TXT) strategies.

METHODS

Connect4LungHealth intervention is a culturally sensitive, linguistically tailored program, facilitated by CHWs, collaboratively developed with our local Chinese and Korean community stakeholders to improve lung cancer control. Guided by our Community Advisory Board, LCS-eligible individuals were invited through community advertisements and social networks. Enrolled participants attended a Lung Health in-person workshop at a community setting and were then randomized to the Connect4LungHealth or an attention control (AC) group on the workshop level for a one-month intervention duration with a baseline, 1-month, and 3-month follow ups. Participants in the Connect4LungHealth arm received three tailored text messages per week, covering topics such as smoking cessation knowledge, self-regulatory skills, and raising LCS awareness with proactive CHW weekly check-in phone calls. The AC group received the same frequency of messages about healthy eating and was given information for connecting with CHW. Participants interested in LCS were directed to our institution's centralized LCS Program, supported by CHWs who could connect patients to insurance resources and accompany participants to an in-person shared decision-making visit performed by the LCS Program nurse navigator, followed immediately by a same-day low-dose CT (LDCT) scan.

RESULTS

Among 48 LCS eligible community individuals we reached via community workshops, 36 (75%, 19 Chinese American and 17 Korean American) agreed, consented, and completed baseline assessment. Enrolled participants were randomized to the Connect4LungHealth (N=20) or the (AC) group (N=16). Participants were an average of 61 years old, 86.1% were males and 80.6% had education level of high school or below and 50% had limited English proficiency. The retention rate was above 75% with high satisfaction reported by the intervention participants. Although not statistically significant, potentially due to the small sample size, we observed a greater reduction in cigarette use and an increase in self-efficacy from baseline to 3-month follow-up in the Connect4LungHealth group compared to the AC group. Further, Connect4LungHealth group achieved a 40% LDCT completion rate via our institution's LCS Program, compared to a 12.5% completion rate in the AC group. Post-intervention interviews provided valuable insights into the cultural barriers and additional needs related to smoking cessation and navigational assistance, offering critical guidance for future program enhancements.

CONCLUSIONS

This pilot study showed the feasibility, acceptability, and potential impact of Connect4LungHealth intervention in improving LCS uptake and reducing cigarette use among high-risk Asian populations. Our integrated approach, utilizing mobile TXT combined with CHW model, is novel and highly relevant, and implementable in underserved communities. Future large-scale efficacy and implementation trials are needed to further validate these findings.

摘要

引言

肺癌是亚裔美国人癌症死亡的主要原因。尽管肺癌筛查(LCS)有潜力在疾病早期进行检测并降低死亡率,但LCS的接受度仍然很低。这在吸烟率高的亚裔亚群体中尤其令人担忧。此外,专门为亚裔美国人量身定制的干预项目很少。这项试点研究的目的是开发和评估“连接4肺健康”干预措施,通过由社区卫生工作者(CHW)推动并结合移动短信(TXT)策略的方法,提高高危华人和韩裔社区对LCS的采用率并促进戒烟。

方法

“连接4肺健康”干预措施是一个具有文化敏感性、语言针对性的项目,由CHW推动实施,与当地华人和韩裔社区利益相关者合作开发,以改善肺癌控制。在我们的社区咨询委员会的指导下,通过社区广告和社交网络邀请符合LCS条件的个人。登记的参与者在社区环境中参加了一次肺癌健康现场研讨会,然后在研讨会层面被随机分配到“连接4肺健康”组或注意力控制(AC)组,进行为期一个月的干预,并进行基线、1个月和3个月的随访。“连接4肺健康”组的参与者每周收到三条量身定制的短信,内容包括戒烟知识、自我调节技能,以及通过CHW每周主动的电话回访提高对LCS的认识。AC组收到相同频率的关于健康饮食的信息,并获得与CHW联系的信息。对LCS感兴趣的参与者被引导到我们机构的集中LCS项目,由CHW提供支持,CHW可以将患者与保险资源联系起来,并陪同参与者参加由LCS项目护士导航员进行的面对面共同决策访问,随后立即进行当日低剂量CT(LDCT)扫描。

结果

通过社区研讨会,我们接触到48名符合LCS条件的社区个人,其中36人(75%,19名华裔美国人和17名韩裔美国人)同意、签署知情同意书并完成了基线评估。登记的参与者被随机分配到“连接4肺健康”组(N = 20)或AC组(N = 16)。参与者平均年龄为61岁,86.1%为男性,80.6%的教育水平为高中或以下,50%的英语水平有限。干预参与者的保留率高于75%,满意度较高。虽然由于样本量小没有统计学意义,但我们观察到与AC组相比,“连接4肺健康”组从基线到3个月随访期间香烟使用量减少更多,自我效能感有所提高。此外,“连接4肺健康”组通过我们机构的LCS项目实现了40%的LDCT完成率,而AC组的完成率为12.5%。干预后的访谈提供了关于戒烟和导航援助相关的文化障碍及其他需求的宝贵见解,为未来项目改进提供了关键指导。

结论

这项试点研究表明“连接4肺健康”干预措施在提高高危亚裔人群对LCS的采用率和减少香烟使用方面具有可行性、可接受性和潜在影响。我们将移动TXT与CHW模式相结合的综合方法新颖且高度相关,可在服务不足的社区实施。未来需要进行大规模的疗效和实施试验来进一步验证这些发现。

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