Literature DB >> 8569292

The role of midlevel providers in cancer screening.

C A Reed1, C S Selleck.   

Abstract

Data indicate that midlevel providers are more likely to provide health promotion and disease prevention counseling, health education, and preventive health and screening services as well as use more community resources. Although the literature is sparse regarding cancer screening activities by midlevel providers, such activities are routinely taught in midlevel educational programs, and midlevel providers see these activities as consistent with their roles. Therefore, it is only logical to assume that use of midlevel providers, who have already been shown to focus on health promotion and disease prevention, would be an effective way to provide quality, cost-effective cancer screening. In fact, models of this sort exist around the United States at the present time, such as the one at Moffitt Cancer Center's Lifetime Cancer Screening Program in Tampa, Florida. In such programs, midlevel providers are successfully conducting comprehensive cancer screening activities. Outcome data from these programs have yet to be published, however. In a collaborative practice environment, the delivery of preventive care, including cancer screening activities, is best accomplished when both the physician and the midlevel provider agree on the importance of these screening activities and work together as a team to integrate these preventive health activities into their office practice. Office systems that are sensitive to patient preferences and that promote preventive care, such as protocols and checklists or health maintenance flowsheets, along with appropriate education tailored to patients' ages and to their social, cultural, and educational backgrounds also help to improve compliance with cancer screening guidelines. More than ever before, health care reform has been the focus of national debate. Most of the health care reform proposals that have been advanced recognize the importance of primary and preventive health care and the role that midlevel providers could and should be playing in such a system. As competent providers, NPs, CNMs, and PAs have the ability to enhance medicine's effectiveness in preventive care, through improved outreach and more thorough screening.

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Year:  1996        PMID: 8569292     DOI: 10.1016/s0025-7125(05)70431-4

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med Clin North Am        ISSN: 0025-7125            Impact factor:   5.456


  3 in total

1.  Improved access to women's health services for Alaska natives through community health aide training.

Authors:  C H Sox; A J Dietrich; D C Goldman; E M Provost
Journal:  J Community Health       Date:  1999-08

2.  Associations between provider designation and female-specific cancer screening in women Veterans.

Authors:  Bevanne Bean-Mayberry; Lori Bastian; Mark Trentalange; Terrence E Murphy; Melissa Skanderson; Heather Allore; Evelyn Reyes-Harvey; Natalya C Maisel; Vera Gaetano; Steven Wright; Sally Haskell; Cynthia Brandt
Journal:  Med Care       Date:  2015-04       Impact factor: 2.983

Review 3.  The Role of the Advanced Practitioner in a Comprehensive Lung Cancer Screening and Pulmonary Nodule Program.

Authors:  Amanda E Reid; Lynn Tanoue; Frank Detterbeck; Gaetane Celine Michaud; Ruth McCorkle
Journal:  J Adv Pract Oncol       Date:  2014 Nov-Dec
  3 in total

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