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1.
J Emerg Med ; 2024 Mar 30.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38839453

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer death in the United States. Lung cancer screening (LCS) decreases lung cancer mortality. Emergency department (ED) patients are at disproportionately high risk for lung cancer. The ED, therefore, is an optimal environment for interventions to promote LCS. OBJECTIVES: Demonstrate the operational feasibility of identifying ED patients in need of LCS, referring them to LCS services, deploying a text message intervention to promote LCS, and conducting follow-up to determine LCS uptake. METHODS: We conducted a randomized clinical trial to determine the feasibility and provide estimates of the preliminary efficacies of 1) basic referral for LCS and 2) basic referral plus a text messaging intervention, grounded in behavioral change theory, to promote uptake of LCS among ED patients. Participants aged 50 to 80, identified as eligible for LCS, were randomized to study arms and followed up at 150 days to assess interval LCS uptake (primary outcome), barriers to screening, and perceptions of the study interventions. RESULTS: A total of 303 patients were surveyed, with 198 identified as eligible for LCS and subsequently randomized. Results indicated that 24% of participants with follow-up data received LCS (11% of the total randomized sample). Rates of screening at follow-up were similar across study arms. The intervention significantly improved normative perceptions of LCS (p = 0.015; Cohen's d = 0.45). CONCLUSION: This pilot study demonstrates the feasibility of ED-based interventions to increase uptake of LCS among ED patients. A scalable ED-based intervention that increases LCS uptake could reduce lung cancer mortality.

2.
Prev Med Rep ; 33: 102221, 2023 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37223552

RESUMEN

The emergency department patient population is disproportionately under-screened for cancer, making it an optimal environment to promote cancer screening among hard-to-reach populations and those without routine access to primary care. The first step in a cancer screening process is identifying screening eligibility (e.g. age, sex) and need (i.e. due or past due). In an effort to support the scalability of an emergency department (ED)-based cervical cancer screening intervention, we examined the performance of a low-resource approach of determining cervical cancer screening needs among ED patients. A convenience sample of ED patients (N = 2807) was randomized to (a) an in-person interview with human subjects research staff or, (b) a self-administered, tablet computer-based survey for determining cervical cancer eligibility and need. Patients were recruited from a high-volume urban ED in Rochester, NY and a low-volume rural ED in Dansville, NY between December 2020 and December 2022. Results of these approaches were compared for equivalence of method for determining adherence status with screening guidelines and under/over-reporting of screening activity. Nearly identical reported rates of non-adherence with screening were identified across conditions (1.7% absolute difference; Χ21 = 0.96, p = 0.33). Our results demonstrate that a low-resource approach of using a tablet-based self-administered survey to determine cervical cancer screening needs is equivalent to a labor intensive in-person interview approach conducted by trained research staff among ED patients.

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