Evaluating the Reach of a Patient Navigation Program for Follow-up Colonoscopy in a Large Federally Qualified Health Center.
Priyanka GautomA Gabriela RosalesAmanda F PetrikJamie H ThompsonMatthew T SlaughterLeslie MossoSyed Akmal HussainRicardo JimenezGloria D CoronadoPublished in: Cancer prevention research (Philadelphia, Pa.) (2024)
Patient navigation (PN) has been shown to improve participation in cancer screening, including colorectal cancer screening, and is now a recommended practice by the Community Preventive Services Task Force. Despite the effectiveness of PN programs, little is known about the number of contacts needed to successfully reach patients or about the demographic and healthcare utilization factors associated with reach. PRECISE was an individual randomized study of PN versus usual care conducted as a partnership between two large health systems in the Pacific Northwest. The navigation program was a six-topic area telephonic program designed to support patients with an abnormal fecal test result to obtain a follow-up colonoscopy. We report the number of contact attempts needed to successfully reach navigated patients. We used logistic regression to report the demographic and healthcare utilization characteristics associated with patients allocated to PN who were successfully reached. We identified 1,200 patients with an abnormal fecal immunochemical test result, of whom 970 were randomized into the study (45.7% were female, 17.5% were Spanish-speaking, and the mean age was 60.8 years). Of the 479 patients allocated to the PN intervention, 382 (79.7%) were reached within 18 call attempts, and nearly all (n = 356; 93.2%) were reached within six contact attempts. Patient characteristics associated with reach were race, county of residence, and body mass index. Our findings can guide future efforts to optimize the reach of PN programs. Prevention Relevance: The findings from this large study can inform clinic-level implementation of future PN programs in Federally Qualified Health Centers to improve the reach of patients needing cancer screenings, optimize staff resources, and ultimately increase cancer screenings.
Keyphrases
- healthcare
- end stage renal disease
- newly diagnosed
- ejection fraction
- body mass index
- quality improvement
- public health
- mental health
- primary care
- prognostic factors
- squamous cell carcinoma
- papillary thyroid
- clinical trial
- young adults
- case report
- patient reported outcomes
- double blind
- weight gain
- current status
- phase ii
- childhood cancer
- placebo controlled