Translation of an efficacious cancer-screening intervention to women enrolled in a Medicaid managed care organization

Annals of family medicine, 5(4), 320-327

DOI 10.1370/afm.701 PMID 17664498 Source

Abstract

Purpose

An earlier randomized controlled trial of prevention care management (PCM) found significant improvement in breast, cervical, and colorectal cancer-screening rates among women attending Community Health Centers but required substantial research support. This study evaluated the impact of a streamlined PCM delivered through a Medicaid managed care organization (MMCO), an infrastructure with the potential to sustain this program for the long term.

Methods

This randomized trial was conducted within an MMCO serving New York City between May 2005 and December 2005. A total of 1,316 women aged 40 to 69 years and not up to date for at least 1 targeted cancer-screening test were randomized to either PCM or a comparison group. Women in the PCM group received up to 3 scripted telephone calls to identify barriers and provide support to obtain any needed breast, cervical, and colorectal cancer-screening tests. Women in the comparison group received a modified version of the MMCO's established mammography telephone outreach program, also in up to 3 calls. Women in both groups received a financial incentive on confirmation that they had received a mammogram. Screening status was assessed through MMCO administrative data. Groups were compared using odds ratios.

Results

In an intent-to-treat comparison adjusted for baseline screening status, PCM women were 1.69 times more likely to be up-to-date for colorectal cancer-screening tests at follow-up than women in the comparison group (95% confidence interval, 1.03-2.77). Follow-up screening rates for cervical and breast cancer did not differ significantly between study groups on an intent-to-treat basis.

Conclusions

The abbreviated PCM telephone intervention was feasible to deliver through an MMCO and improved screening for 1 cancer. This approach has the potential to improve cancer-screening rates significantly in settings that can provide telephone support to women known to be overdue.

Topics

cancer screening medicaid populations, breast cervical colorectal screening intervention, prevention care management telephone outreach, underserved women cancer screening rates, managed care cancer screening programs, telephone-based screening support, financial incentives mammography compliance, randomized trial cancer prevention

Cite this article

Dietrich, A. J., Tobin, J. N., Cassells, A., Robinson, C. M., Reh, M., Romero, K. A., Flood, A. B., & Beach, M. L. (2007). Translation of an efficacious cancer-screening intervention to women enrolled in a Medicaid managed care organization. *Annals of family medicine*, *5*(4), 320-327. https://doi.org/10.1370/afm.701

Related articles