A Randomized Controlled Calendar Mail-Out to Increase Cancer Screening Among Urban American Indian and Alaska Native Patients

被引:0
作者
Ardith Z. Doorenbos
Clemma Jacobsen
Rebecca Corpuz
Ralph Forquera
Dedra Buchwald
机构
[1] University of Washington,School of Nursing
[2] University of Washington,Partnerships for Native Health
[3] Seattle Indian Health Board,School of Medicine
[4] University of Washington,undefined
来源
Journal of Cancer Education | 2011年 / 26卷
关键词
Cancer; Prevention; Screening; American Indians; Health disparities; Randomized; Controlled trial;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
This study seeks to ascertain whether a culturally tailored art calendar could improve participation in cancer screening activities. We conducted a randomized, controlled calendar mail-out in which a Native art calendar was sent by first class mail to 5,633 patients seen at an urban American Indian clinic during the prior 2 years. Using random assignment, half of the patients were mailed a “message” calendar with screening information and reminders on breast, colorectal, lung, and prostate cancer; the other half received a calendar without messages. The receipt of cancer screening services was ascertained through chart abstraction in the following 15 months. In total, 5,363 observations (health messages n = 2,695; no messages n = 2,668) were analyzed. The calendar with health messages did not result in increased receipt of any cancer-related prevention outcome compared to the calendar without health messages. We solicited clinic input to create a culturally appropriate visual intervention to increase cancer screening in a vulnerable, underserved urban population. Our results suggest that printed materials with health messages are likely too weak an intervention to produce the desired behavioral outcomes in cancer screening.
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页码:549 / 554
页数:5
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