Literature DB >> 20863395

Get screened: a pragmatic randomized controlled trial to increase mammography and colorectal cancer screening in a large, safety net practice.

Kevin Fiscella1, Amanat Yosha, Samantha K Hendren, Sharon Humiston, Paul Winters, Pat Ford, Starlene Loader, Raymond Specht, Shirley Pope, Amna Adris, Steven Marcus.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Most randomized controlled trials of interventions designed to promote cancer screening, particularly those targeting poor and minority patients, enroll selected patients. Relatively little is known about the benefits of these interventions among unselected patients. METHODS/
DESIGN: "Get Screened" is an American Cancer Society-sponsored randomized controlled trial designed to promote mammography and colorectal cancer screening in a primary care practice serving low-income patients. Eligible patients who are past due for mammography or colorectal cancer screening are entered into a tracking registry and randomly assigned to early or delayed intervention. This 6-month intervention is multimodal, involving patient prompts, clinician prompts, and outreach. At the time of the patient visit, eligible patients receive a low-literacy patient education tool. At the same time, clinicians receive a prompt to remind them to order the test and, when appropriate, a tool designed to simplify colorectal cancer screening decision-making. Patient outreach consists of personalized letters, automated telephone reminders, assistance with scheduling, and linkage of uninsured patients to the local National Breast and Cervical Cancer Early Detection program. Interventions are repeated for patients who fail to respond to early interventions. We will compare rates of screening between randomized groups, as well as planned secondary analyses of minority patients and uninsured patients. Data from the pilot phase show that this multimodal intervention triples rates of cancer screening (adjusted odds ratio 3.63; 95% CI 2.35 - 5.61). DISCUSSION: This study protocol is designed to assess a multimodal approach to promotion of breast and colorectal cancer screening among underserved patients. We hypothesize that a multimodal approach will significantly improve cancer screening rates.The trial was registered at Clinical Trials.gov NCT00818857.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20863395      PMCID: PMC2955650          DOI: 10.1186/1472-6963-10-280

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  BMC Health Serv Res        ISSN: 1472-6963            Impact factor:   2.655


  34 in total

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Authors:  G I Kempen; M Jelicic; J Ormel
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6.  The inverse care law.

Authors:  J T Hart
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7.  Use of a low-literacy patient education tool to enhance pneumococcal vaccination rates. A randomized controlled trial.

Authors:  T A Jacobson; D M Thomas; F J Morton; G Offutt; J Shevlin; S Ray
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8.  Attempting the improbable: offering colorectal cancer screening to all appropriate patients.

Authors:  C Bejes; M K Marvel
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9.  Influence of socioeconomic and cultural factors on racial differences in late-stage presentation of breast cancer.

Authors:  D R Lannin; H F Mathews; J Mitchell; M S Swanson; F H Swanson; M S Edwards
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Review 10.  Competing demands of primary care: a model for the delivery of clinical preventive services.

Authors:  C R Jaén; K C Stange; P A Nutting
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  7 in total

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2.  Joint breast and colorectal cancer screenings in medically underserved women.

Authors:  Terry C Davis; Connie L Arnold; Michael S Wolf; Charles L Bennett; Dachao Liu; Alfred Rademaker
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3.  Get screened: a randomized trial of the incremental benefits of reminders, recall, and outreach on cancer screening.

Authors:  Robert J Fortuna; Amna Idris; Paul Winters; Sharon G Humiston; Steven Scofield; Samantha Hendren; Patricia Ford; Shirley X L Li; Kevin Fiscella
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4.  Recruiting patients into the CDC's Colorectal Cancer Screening Demonstration Program: strategies and challenges across 5 sites.

Authors:  Jennifer E Boehm; Elizabeth A Rohan; Judith Preissle; Amy DeGroff; Rebecca Glover-Kudon
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5.  Randomized, controlled trial of a multimodal intervention to improve cancer screening rates in a safety-net primary care practice.

Authors:  Samantha Hendren; Paul Winters; Sharon Humiston; Amna Idris; Shirley X L Li; Patricia Ford; Raymond Specht; Stephen Marcus; Michael Mendoza; Kevin Fiscella
Journal:  J Gen Intern Med       Date:  2013-07-02       Impact factor: 5.128

6.  Physician visits and colorectal cancer testing among Medicare enrollees in North Carolina and South Carolina, 2005.

Authors:  Anna P Schenck; Carrie N Klabunde; Joan L Warren; Eric Jackson; Sharon Peacock; Pauline Lapin
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7.  Manually-generated reminders delivered on paper: effects on professional practice and patient outcomes.

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