| Literature DB >> 21457575 |
Richard C Palmer1, Raquel Samson, Anamica Batra, Maria Triantis, Irene D Mullan.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: For low income and uninsured populations, safety net clinics are an important source of health care, including preventive services such as mammography screening. However, little is known about how well breast health is coordinated within the safety net clinic environment and what barriers patients encounter.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21457575 PMCID: PMC3080315 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6874-11-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Womens Health ISSN: 1472-6874 Impact factor: 2.809
Moderator Guide and Question Domains
| Question Domain | Admissions Clerks/Administrative Personnel | Medical Director/Clinic Director | Primary Care Providers |
|---|---|---|---|
| Administrative Processes | X | X | NA |
| Education/Counseling | X | X | X |
| Breast Cancer Screening Policies | NA | X | X |
| Screening Practices and Beliefs | NA | X | X |
| Diagnosis and Treatment | NA | X | X |
| Cultural Awareness/and Linguistics | X | X | X |
| Referral Protocols and Scheduling | X | NA | NA |
Figure 1Referral logistics for screening mammograms.
Summary of findings explaining barriers to screening for breast cancer
| Cultural beliefs (i.e., appropriateness of a male provider to provide breast care) |
| Screening costs |
| Religious beliefs |
| Fear of pain |
| Patient compliance and cooperation |
| Preference for a female health provider |
| Lack of familiarity with prevention as a health concept among many immigrants |
| Transportation |
| Having a female provider at the clinic to conduct examinations |
| Access to care/cost |
| Location of mammogram facility |
| Availability of the mobile mammogram screening van at the clinic site |
| Time availability of providers for well-woman services at clinics |
| Screenings not conducted at the clinic |
| Inefficient WCCP paperwork requirements |
Needs assessment recommendations
| 1. Development of a comprehensive referral tracking system that systematically documents the referral process from the clinic-level referral for screening through follow up to determine screening outcomes. |
| 2. Development of a coherent application process that supports patient access to mammogram screening. |
| 3. Development of guidelines to determine when all county clinics will make referrals for screening mammograms. |
| 4. Ensure cultural and linguistic barriers to breast cancer prevention are addressed at time of mammogram referral. |
| 5. Electronic Medical Record (CHL Care) implementation and training to support coordination of breast cancer screening care at the clinic level. |
| 6. Ensure that the clinic environment is culturally and linguistically competent to provide effective, sensitive breast and cervical cancer health care prevention and treatment services for patients. |
| 7. Evaluate the educational program and timing of the delivery of the breast health educational initiatives at each clinic and develop a protocol for best practices across clinics. |