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Search All Research Studies
Topics
- Cancer (3)
- Cancer: Breast Cancer (1)
- Cancer: Colorectal Cancer (2)
- Cancer: Lung Cancer (1)
- Case Study (1)
- Colonoscopy (1)
- Communication (1)
- Community-Based Practice (1)
- Diagnostic Safety and Quality (1)
- Evidence-Based Practice (1)
- Healthcare Delivery (1)
- Healthcare Utilization (1)
- Imaging (1)
- Mammogram (2)
- Patient-Centered Healthcare (1)
- Patient Adherence/Compliance (1)
- Prevention (4)
- (-) Safety Net (6)
- (-) Screening (6)
- Social Determinants of Health (1)
- Urban Health (1)
- Vulnerable Populations (1)
- Women (2)
AHRQ Research Studies
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Research Studies is a monthly compilation of research articles funded by AHRQ or authored by AHRQ researchers and recently published in journals or newsletters.
Results
1 to 6 of 6 Research Studies Displayed
Holcomb J, Ferguson G, Roth I
Adoption of an evidence-based intervention for mammography screening adherence in safety net clinics.
This paper describes an evidence-based intervention that was created to reduce mammography appointment no-show rates in underserved women at safety net clinics. An academic-community partnership was used to implement four strategies to improve the adoption and scale-up of the interventions with Federally Qualified Health Centers and charity care clinics. The interventions implemented were: (1) an outreach email blast targeting the community partner member clinics to increase program awareness, (2) an adoption video encouraging enrollment in the program, (3) an outreach webinar educating the community partner member clinics about the program, encouraging enrollment and outlining adoption steps, and (4) an adoption survey adapted from Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research constructs from the Cancer Prevention and Control Research Network for cancer control interventions with Federally Qualified Health Centers.
AHRQ-funded; HS023255.
Citation:
Holcomb J, Ferguson G, Roth I .
Adoption of an evidence-based intervention for mammography screening adherence in safety net clinics.
Front Public Health 2021 Nov 4;9:748361. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2021.748361..
Keywords:
Evidence-Based Practice, Mammogram, Screening, Safety Net, Women, Community-Based Practice
Kranz AM, Ryan J, Mahmud A, AM, Ryan J, Mahmud A
Association of primary and specialty care integration on physician communication and cancer screening in safety-net clinics.
Lack of cancer screenings are more common in community health centers (CHCs) which provide primary care to disadvantaged populations due to difficulty accessing specialty care for their patients. This study’s objective was to describe CHCs use to integrate care with specialists and examine whether strongly integrated CHCs have higher rates of screening colorectal and cervical cancers. A 2017 survey of CHCs in 12 states and the District of Columbia was used to estimate the association between a composite measure of CHC/specialist integration and cancer screening rates and 4 measures of CHC/specialist communication using multivariate regression models. More integrated CHCs had higher screening rates of colorectal and cervical cancer and had significantly higher rates of knowing that specialist visits happened, knowing visit outcomes, receiving information after visits, and timely receipt of information.
AHRQ-funded; HS024067.
Citation:
Kranz AM, Ryan J, Mahmud A, AM, Ryan J, Mahmud A .
Association of primary and specialty care integration on physician communication and cancer screening in safety-net clinics.
Prev Chronic Dis 2020 Oct 29;17:E134. doi: 10.5888/pcd17.200025..
Keywords:
Cancer, Screening, Communication, Prevention, Safety Net, Patient-Centered Healthcare, Healthcare Delivery
Lee SJC, Hamann HA, Browning T
Stakeholder engagement to initiate lung cancer screening in an urban safety-net health system.
The authors sought to develop a population-based lung cancer screening program using low-dose computed tomography imaging at Parkland Health & Hospital System, Dallas County, Texas, providing coverage of uninsured patients through a combination of Medicare, Medicaid, and the Dallas medical assistance program for under- and uninsured, low-income county residents. They found that establishing a uniform clinical pathway connecting different clinical specialists requires a system-level view of care coordination to ensure that referrals trigger appointments, result reporting, and follow-up. Additionally, primary care providers need to educate and refer patients, address smoking cessation needs, and document shared decision-making counseling between the referring provider and the patient.
AHRQ-funded; HS022418.
Citation:
Lee SJC, Hamann HA, Browning T .
Stakeholder engagement to initiate lung cancer screening in an urban safety-net health system.
Healthc 2020 Mar;8(1):100370. doi: 10.1016/j.hjdsi.2019.100370.
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Keywords:
Cancer: Lung Cancer, Cancer, Screening, Prevention, Urban Health, Safety Net, Case Study
Issaka RB, Singh MH, Oshima SM
Inadequate utilization of diagnostic colonoscopy following abnormal FIT results in an integrated safety-net system.
The effectiveness of stool-based colorectal cancer (CRC) screening is contingent on colonoscopy completion in patients with an abnormal fecal immunochemical test (FIT). This study found that FIT positive patients never referred to gastroenterology or who missed their appointment after referrals were more likely to have comorbid conditions and documented illicit substance use compared with patients who completed a colonoscopy.
AHRQ-funded; HS023558.
Citation:
Issaka RB, Singh MH, Oshima SM .
Inadequate utilization of diagnostic colonoscopy following abnormal FIT results in an integrated safety-net system.
Am J Gastroenterol 2017 Feb;112(2):375-82. doi: 10.1038/ajg.2016.555.
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Keywords:
Cancer: Colorectal Cancer, Colonoscopy, Diagnostic Safety and Quality, Healthcare Utilization, Safety Net, Screening
Singal AG, Gupta S, Tiro JA
Outreach invitations for FIT and colonoscopy improve colorectal cancer screening rates: a randomized controlled trial in a safety-net health system.
Among a racially diverse and socioeconomically disadvantaged cohort of patients, the researchers compared the effectiveness of fecal immunochemical test (FIT) outreach and colonoscopy outreach to increase screening participation rates, compared with usual visit-based care. Mailed outreach invitations appear to significantly increase colorectal cancer screening rates among underserved populations. In the current study, FIT-based outreach was found to be more effective than colonoscopy-based outreach.
AHRQ-funded; HS022418.
Citation:
Singal AG, Gupta S, Tiro JA .
Outreach invitations for FIT and colonoscopy improve colorectal cancer screening rates: a randomized controlled trial in a safety-net health system.
Cancer 2016 Feb 1;122(3):456-63. doi: 10.1002/cncr.29770.
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Keywords:
Cancer: Colorectal Cancer, Prevention, Screening, Safety Net, Social Determinants of Health
Highfield L, Rajan SS, Valerio MA
A non-randomized controlled stepped wedge trial to evaluate the effectiveness of a multi-level mammography intervention in improving appointment adherence in underserved women.
This study evaluated a theoretically based, systematically designed implementation strategy to support adoption and implementation of a patient navigation-based intervention, called Peace of Mind Program (PMP), aimed at improving breast cancer screening among underserved women.. Any potential confounding or bias will be controlled in the analysis. Outcomes such as appointment adherence, patient referral to diagnostics, time to diagnostic referral, patient referral to treatment, time to treatment referral, and budget impact of the intervention will be assessed.
AHRQ-funded; HS023255.
Citation:
Highfield L, Rajan SS, Valerio MA .
A non-randomized controlled stepped wedge trial to evaluate the effectiveness of a multi-level mammography intervention in improving appointment adherence in underserved women.
Implement Sci 2015 Oct 14;10:143. doi: 10.1186/s13012-015-0334-x.
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Keywords:
Cancer: Breast Cancer, Cancer, Mammogram, Screening, Patient Adherence/Compliance, Vulnerable Populations, Safety Net, Prevention, Women, Imaging