| Literature DB >> 35382905 |
Ambreen Sayani1, Jackie Manthorne2, Erika Nicholson3, Gary Bloch4,5, Janet A Parsons6,7, Stephen W Hwang8, Bikila Amenu9, Howard Freedman9, Marlene Rathbone9, Tara Jeji9, Nadine Wathen10, Annette J Browne11, Colleen Varcoe11, Aisha Lofters12,13.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Screening for lung cancer with low dose CT can facilitate the detection of early-stage lung cancers that are amenable to treatment, reducing mortality related to lung cancer. Individuals are considered eligible for lung cancer screening if they meet specific high-risk criteria, such as age and smoking history. Population groups that are at highest risk of lung cancer, and therefore, the target of lung cancer screening interventions, are also the least likely to participate in lung cancer screening. This can lead to a widening of health inequities. Deliberate effort is needed to both reduce lung cancer risk (through upstream interventions that promote smoking cessation) as well as midstream interventions that promote equitable access to lung cancer screening.Entities:
Keywords: Equity-informed patient-oriented research; Equity-oriented health care; Health equity; Health inequity; Lung cancer screening; Participatory co-design; Patient engagement; Protocol; SPOR
Year: 2022 PMID: 35382905 PMCID: PMC8980795 DOI: 10.1186/s40900-022-00344-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Res Involv Engagem ISSN: 2056-7529
Key definitions
| Equity-Oriented Health Care (EOHC): The EQUIP Healthcare Model |
| An approach to care that considers the effects of structural inequities, including the inequitable distribution of the determinants of health (such as poverty, lack of affordable housing); the impact of intersecting forms of racism, discrimination and stigma (e.g., related to mental illness, substance use, non-conforming gender identities, etc.) on people’s access to services and their experiences of care; and the frequent disconnect between usual approaches to care and the needs of people who are most affected by health and social inequities (Cited with permission from Browne et al., 2018, p. 2) |
| EQUIP’s “take” on Equity-Oriented Health Care incorporates the three key dimensions, listed below, which overlap and can be tailored to any health care setting |
| Trauma- and violence-informed care (TVIC): |
| Recognizing and limiting the effects of trauma and violence, including structural violence, on peoples’ lives, health and care experiences |
| Cultural safety (CS): |
| The practice of actively reducing power imbalances, systemic racism, and discrimination in clinical encounters |
| Harm reduction: |
| A focus on preventing harms from substance use and intersecting forms of stigma, and attention to the notion of substance use health, as the achievement of self-defined goals of well-being across the continuum of substance use ranging from no substance use to substance use disorder. Providing substance use health care requires a) deprioritizing abstinence as the primary success outcome of health care, b) removing barriers to care, including intersecting forms of stigma, and c) facilitating access to social determinants of health for those with limited access [ |
Fig. 1Generative Co-Design Framework for Healthcare Innovation applied to co-develop a healthcare provider facing e-learning module to promote equitable access to lung cancer screening
Fig. 2Study governance structure: at the core of the governance model is the study PI who builds consensus with all patient partners and study stakeholders through engagement in multiple safe spaces
Steps involved in research priority setting and participatory co-design timelines
| Topic | Initial idea | Discussion point | Consensus |
|---|---|---|---|
| Research focus (April–May 2021) | To understand the equity-oriented learning needs of family physicians in Ontario to inform the co-design of a learning module | Is there is a need to focus on all family physicians in Ontario, or would it be better to speak to family physicians who are more likely to be providing care to priority populations? | To understand the equity-oriented learning needs of family physicians in community-focused practice settings in Ontario in order to inform the co-design of a learning module |
| Research question (June 2021) | To understand learning needs of family physicians as they are gatekeepers to lung cancer screening | Is there a need to speak to just family physicians? The wrap around support services offered by all primary care providers in community-focused practice settings create the environment and support structures needed for participation in LCS | Research question to include all frontline primary care providers in community-focused practice settings: To understand the learning needs of primary care providers in community-focused practice settings in Ontario in order to inform the co-design of a learning module |
| Research approach (July–August 2021) | To interview healthcare providers in community-focused practice settings to inform the co-design of an equity-focused learning module to support lung cancer screening uptake | Can we gather more informative data from providers in community-focused practices settings who have previously received equity-focused training as they have the relevant prior learning and clinical experience to be able to contextualize LCS? | To conduct semi-structured interviews with primary care providers in community-focused practice settings who have received prior training on how to deliver equity-oriented healthcare (EOHC) in order to understand the equity-oriented skills they apply in practice to promote equitable access to LCS |
| Dissemination strategy (October 2021) | To co-design a learning module that will promote the delivery of EOHC to increase uptake of LCS in priority populations | Can we co-design a module to be included with other EOHC learning material rather than building a totally new standalone module? | To partner with Equipping Health & Social Services for Health Equity (EQUIP) to co-develop and disseminate the learning module on the EQUIP web platform so that it can be widely and freely accessible to learners in Ontario and elsewhere |