ACCISS study rationale and design: activating collaborative cancer information service support for cervical cancer screening

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>High-quality cancer information resources are available but underutilized by the public. Despite greater awareness of the National Cancer Institute's Cancer Information Service among low-income African Americans and Hispanics co...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Bullard Emily, Fought Angela, McFadden H Gene, Randhawa Veenu, Cofta-Woerpel Ludmila, Spring Bonnie
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2009-12-01
Series:BMC Public Health
Online Access:http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2458/9/444
id doaj-0817ee81e0f94d15a39734856cbc2e1a
record_format Article
spelling doaj-0817ee81e0f94d15a39734856cbc2e1a2020-11-24T21:24:45ZengBMCBMC Public Health1471-24582009-12-019144410.1186/1471-2458-9-444ACCISS study rationale and design: activating collaborative cancer information service support for cervical cancer screeningBullard EmilyFought AngelaMcFadden H GeneRandhawa VeenuCofta-Woerpel LudmilaSpring Bonnie<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>High-quality cancer information resources are available but underutilized by the public. Despite greater awareness of the National Cancer Institute's Cancer Information Service among low-income African Americans and Hispanics compared with Caucasians, actual Cancer Information Service usage is lower than expected, paralleling excess cancer-related morbidity and mortality for these subgroups. The proposed research examines how to connect the Cancer Information Service to low-income African-American and Hispanic women and their health care providers. The study will examine whether targeted physician mailing to women scheduled for colposcopy to follow up an abnormal Pap test can increase calls to the Cancer Information Service, enhance appropriate medical follow-up, and improve satisfaction with provider-patient communication.</p> <p>Methods/Design</p> <p>The study will be conducted in two clinics in ethnically diverse low-income communities in Chicago. During the formative phase, patients and providers will provide input regarding materials planned for use in the experimental phase of the study. The experimental phase will use a two-group prospective randomized controlled trial design. African American and Hispanic women with an abnormal Pap test will be randomized to Usual Care (routine colposcopy reminder letter) or Intervention (reminder plus provider recommendation to call the Cancer Information Service and sample questions to ask). Primary outcomes will be: 1) calls to the Cancer Information Service; 2) timely medical follow-up, operationalized by whether the patient keeps her colposcopy appointment within six months of the abnormal Pap; and 3) patient satisfaction with provider-patient communication at follow-up.</p> <p>Discussion</p> <p>The study examines the effectiveness of a feasible, sustainable, and culturally sensitive strategy to increase awareness and use of the Cancer Information Service among an underserved population. The goal of linking a public service (the Cancer Information Service) with real-life settings of practice (the clinics), and considering input from patients, providers, and Cancer Information Service staff, is to ensure that the intervention, if proven effective, can be incorporated into existing care systems and sustained. The approach to study design and planning is aimed at bridging the gap between research and practice/service.</p> <p>Trial Registration</p> <p>NCT00873288</p> http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2458/9/444
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Bullard Emily
Fought Angela
McFadden H Gene
Randhawa Veenu
Cofta-Woerpel Ludmila
Spring Bonnie
spellingShingle Bullard Emily
Fought Angela
McFadden H Gene
Randhawa Veenu
Cofta-Woerpel Ludmila
Spring Bonnie
ACCISS study rationale and design: activating collaborative cancer information service support for cervical cancer screening
BMC Public Health
author_facet Bullard Emily
Fought Angela
McFadden H Gene
Randhawa Veenu
Cofta-Woerpel Ludmila
Spring Bonnie
author_sort Bullard Emily
title ACCISS study rationale and design: activating collaborative cancer information service support for cervical cancer screening
title_short ACCISS study rationale and design: activating collaborative cancer information service support for cervical cancer screening
title_full ACCISS study rationale and design: activating collaborative cancer information service support for cervical cancer screening
title_fullStr ACCISS study rationale and design: activating collaborative cancer information service support for cervical cancer screening
title_full_unstemmed ACCISS study rationale and design: activating collaborative cancer information service support for cervical cancer screening
title_sort acciss study rationale and design: activating collaborative cancer information service support for cervical cancer screening
publisher BMC
series BMC Public Health
issn 1471-2458
publishDate 2009-12-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>High-quality cancer information resources are available but underutilized by the public. Despite greater awareness of the National Cancer Institute's Cancer Information Service among low-income African Americans and Hispanics compared with Caucasians, actual Cancer Information Service usage is lower than expected, paralleling excess cancer-related morbidity and mortality for these subgroups. The proposed research examines how to connect the Cancer Information Service to low-income African-American and Hispanic women and their health care providers. The study will examine whether targeted physician mailing to women scheduled for colposcopy to follow up an abnormal Pap test can increase calls to the Cancer Information Service, enhance appropriate medical follow-up, and improve satisfaction with provider-patient communication.</p> <p>Methods/Design</p> <p>The study will be conducted in two clinics in ethnically diverse low-income communities in Chicago. During the formative phase, patients and providers will provide input regarding materials planned for use in the experimental phase of the study. The experimental phase will use a two-group prospective randomized controlled trial design. African American and Hispanic women with an abnormal Pap test will be randomized to Usual Care (routine colposcopy reminder letter) or Intervention (reminder plus provider recommendation to call the Cancer Information Service and sample questions to ask). Primary outcomes will be: 1) calls to the Cancer Information Service; 2) timely medical follow-up, operationalized by whether the patient keeps her colposcopy appointment within six months of the abnormal Pap; and 3) patient satisfaction with provider-patient communication at follow-up.</p> <p>Discussion</p> <p>The study examines the effectiveness of a feasible, sustainable, and culturally sensitive strategy to increase awareness and use of the Cancer Information Service among an underserved population. The goal of linking a public service (the Cancer Information Service) with real-life settings of practice (the clinics), and considering input from patients, providers, and Cancer Information Service staff, is to ensure that the intervention, if proven effective, can be incorporated into existing care systems and sustained. The approach to study design and planning is aimed at bridging the gap between research and practice/service.</p> <p>Trial Registration</p> <p>NCT00873288</p>
url http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2458/9/444
work_keys_str_mv AT bullardemily accissstudyrationaleanddesignactivatingcollaborativecancerinformationservicesupportforcervicalcancerscreening
AT foughtangela accissstudyrationaleanddesignactivatingcollaborativecancerinformationservicesupportforcervicalcancerscreening
AT mcfaddenhgene accissstudyrationaleanddesignactivatingcollaborativecancerinformationservicesupportforcervicalcancerscreening
AT randhawaveenu accissstudyrationaleanddesignactivatingcollaborativecancerinformationservicesupportforcervicalcancerscreening
AT coftawoerpelludmila accissstudyrationaleanddesignactivatingcollaborativecancerinformationservicesupportforcervicalcancerscreening
AT springbonnie accissstudyrationaleanddesignactivatingcollaborativecancerinformationservicesupportforcervicalcancerscreening
_version_ 1725986299543814144