| Literature DB >> 23996232 |
Claire L Allen1, Jeffrey R Harris, Peggy A Hannon, Amanda T Parrish, Kristen Hammerback, John Craft, Bruce Gray.
Abstract
As the Affordable Care Act unfolds, federally qualified health centers (FQHCs) will likely experience an influx of newly insured, low-income patients at disparate risk for cancer. Cancer-focused organizations are seeking to collaborate with FQHCs and the Primary Care Associations (PCAs) that serve them, to prevent cancer and reduce disparities. To guide this collaboration, we conducted 21 interviews with representatives from PCAs and FQHCs across four western states. We asked about: FQHC priorities, barriers and facilitators to cancer prevention, the PCA-FQHC relationship, and collaboration opportunities for external organizations. FQHC priorities include medical home transformation, electronic health records, and clinical care; prevention efforts must integrate with these. Barriers to cancer prevention include competing priorities, inadequate patient insurance, and lack of reimbursement, while facilitators are the presence of patient navigators and cancer-related performance measures. Collaboration opportunities for external organizations include dissemination of culturally appropriate educational materials and support for patient navigators.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 23996232 PMCID: PMC3920058 DOI: 10.1007/s13187-013-0535-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cancer Educ ISSN: 0885-8195 Impact factor: 2.037
Fig. 1Sampling strategy
Participant characteristics
| Number | Percent (%) | |
|---|---|---|
| Gender | ||
| Female | 17 | 57 |
| Male | 13 | 43 |
| Occupation | ||
| CEO | 7 | 23 |
| Director clinical services/quality | 5 | 17 |
| Human resources | 4 | 13 |
| Medical director | 4 | 13 |
| Nursing director/supervisor | 6 | 20 |
| Other | 4 | 17 |
| Organization | ||
| PCA | 9 | 30 |
| Rural FQHC system/clinic | 9 | 30 |
| Urban FQHC system/clinic | 12 | 40 |
| Location | ||
| Arizona | 6 | 20 |
| Colorado | 9 | 30 |
| Oregon | 8 | 27 |
| Washington | 7 | 23 |
Key quotes on FQHC priorities and barriers and facilitators to cancer prevention
| Topic | Key theme | Quotes |
|---|---|---|
| FQHC priorities | Current top external priorities for FQHCs are PCMH transformation and EHR implementation. | “I think it’s just keeping our heads above water in the pace of this change that is the priority.” “The highest priority for assisting FQHCs is really with the transformation taking place in healthcare, specifically the PCMH.” |
| Top internal priorities are diabetes and sustaining basic resources. | “Diabetes is always one that we focus on.” “In the food chain, the first priority is keeping the lights on.” | |
| Barriers to cancer prevention in FQHCS | Competing priorities amidst health care reform and scarce time and resources are barriers in FQHCs. | “I think that everyone feels really just overwhelmed with the number of demands on their time.” |
| Patient insurance status is a primary barrier in FQHC populations. | “In a population of patients with no health coverage, preventative care for the family usually takes a low priority.” | |
| FQHCs named lack of reimbursement as a barrier to lifestyle-related prevention. | “We’re living in a very encounter-based reimbursement scheme. A cooking or exercise class… we’re having to figure out how to fund that on a shoestring.” | |
| Facilitators to cancer prevention in FQHCs | FQHCs and PCAs thought of cancer prevention in terms of the UDS outcome measures they report to HRSA. | "When HRSA says that we all have to do it, we all do it." “A lot of our numbers are being driven by meaningful use or UDS measures.” |
| Urban FQHCs named patient navigators or health coaches as a facilitator to cancer prevention. | “We try to model our patient navigation concept with all of them [cancer screening, tobacco cessation, lifestyle-related prevention], because it has proven to be really successful.” “We can see where a coach can spend 15 to 20 min when the provider can’t as really being effective.” | |
| FQHCs in states with an active quit line named this as a facilitator to tobacco cessation. | “Our CHCs [FQHCs] are working very closely with the state quit line.” “I mean, the people use it [the quit line]. I’ve seen them using it. They come in and ask for it.” |
Key quotes on the PCA–FQHC relationship and opportunities to improve cancer prevention
| Topic | Key theme | Quotes |
|---|---|---|
| PCA–FQHC Relationship | Urban-based FQHCs thought PCAs served them by sharing best practices, disseminating information, and lobbying. | "They [PCAs] do a lot of organizing and getting the different centers together. Hopefully, we’re sharing best practices at those meetings." |
| Rural-based FQHCs emphasized their independence and noted that PCAs were not often involved with internal programs. | "We don’t see a lot of people from the PCA in our facilities, nor does any other rural CHC [FQHC]." "We’re pretty independent folks. It would not go well for someone to come in and tell us what we need to do." | |
| FQHCs did not know how PCAs relate to them on cancer prevention, except indirectly through the PCMH process. | "Cancer screening and prevention has not been a high profile initiative of the association, but more supported through an overall approach to PCMH." | |
| Opportunities to improve cancer prevention in FQHCs | FQHCs want culturally appropriate educational materials that share best practices. | "Educational materials in many languages would probably be one of the areas that we could all be working on together better." |
| Urban FQHCs need support for patient navigators to guide patients towards prevention. | “They [patient navigators] would appreciate in-person training on how to use the [cancer prevention] tools and how to integrate them into the system.” "As far as the challenges go, it’s just finding the infrastructure to support this patient navigation concept." | |
| Cancer prevention efforts in FQHCs should integrate with PCMH, EHRs, and routine clinical flow. | “If we were trying to do something to bump up cancer screening, the carrot can be that this will help you to achieve your meaningful use incentives.” "If they could be assessing what is needed in the health centers to increase cancer screenings that matches, integrates, and dovetails with this massive overarching PCMH, I think that would be really, really helpful." |