The purpose of this project is to implement and evaluate an intervention to increase and sustain rates of use of colorectal cancer (CRC) screening among men and women aged 50 and older in 6 intervention counties in Appalachia Ohio. Researchers will employ community-based participatory research (CBPR) in combination with two CRC interventions that have been developed and piloted with community partners to improve CRC screening
PRIMARY OBJECTIVES: I. Utilize CBPR methods to develop specific county-level media campaigns and a clinic-based chart reminder for 12 Ohio Appalachia counties focused on CRC screening or an attention control message. II. Implement and test, using a group-randomized design, a staggered county-wide intervention program that consists of county-specific media campaigns, clinic-specific chart reminder systems, and a combination of both strategies in 6 randomly selected intervention counties vs. an attention control condition in 6 randomly selected control counties. III. Utilize process and outcome evaluation strategies to assess the efficacy of each strategy. IV. Utilize the results to plan the dissemination of the intervention into 36 Appalachian counties in 6 additional states of the Appalachia Community Cancer Network (ACCN) in a subsequent study. OUTLINE: Participants are randomized to 1 of 2 arms. Arm I: Participants are exposed to the "Get Behind Your Health!" media campaign intervention comprising 3 phases: the media campaign, the medical chart reminder, and a combination of media campaign and chart reminder. Participants also undergo telephone interviews during years 2-4. Arm II: Participants are exposed to a media campaign, patient education material in clinics, and a combination related to healthy eating, "PEACHES" (Promoting Education in Appalachia on Cancer and Healthy Eating Styles). Participants also undergo telephone interviews during years 2-4.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
4,509
Participants are exposed to the "Get Behind Your Health!" media campaign intervention comprising 3 phases: the media campaign, the medical chart reminder, and a combination of media campaign and chart reminder. Participants also undergo telephone interviews during years 2-4.
Participants are exposed to a "Healthy Eating!" media campaign intervention comprising 3 phases: the media campaign, the medical chart reminder, and a combination of media campaign and chart reminder. Participants also undergo telephone interviews during years 2-4.
Ohio State University Medical Center
Columbus, Ohio, United States
Rates of colorectal cancer screening-within-guidelines (status obtained by medical record review).
The primary research question is whether the intervention will affect the rate of CRC screening-within-guidelines among age-eligible residents in the participating counties. The primary outcome is CRC screening-within-guidelines status defined as having any one of the following: 1) FOBT in the past year; 2) flexible sigmoidoscopy in the past 5 years; 3) FOBT annually + flexible sigmoidoscopy in the past 5 years; 4) double-contrast barium enema in the past 5 years; or 5) colonoscopy in the past 10 years.
Time frame: Up to 4 years
Confounding - Measurement of prognostic factors measured at baseline for evidence of any imbalance
Though randomization of 12 counties to each condition from within strata reduces the likelihood that there will be any imbalance in important prognostic factors between the two conditions, confounding remains a possibility in any single realization of an experiment. Left alone, such imbalance could confound the true relationship between condition and the outcomes. To avoid this problem, we will examine prognostic factors measured at baseline for evidence of any imbalance; if it is present, we will perform secondary analyses in which we repeat the primary analysis adding the potential confounders as additional covariates, attending carefully to issues of measurement error which can create problems for such adjustments. Regression adjustment cannot completely correct for confounding, but to the extent that the confounders are well measured and properly modeled, the adjusted analysis will reduce the confounding.
Time frame: Up to 2 years
Effect Modification
Other secondary analyses will explore the assumption of homogeneity of the intervention effect across subgroups of participants. Though power will be limited for interactions, we will add subgroup main effects and interactions in order to explore possible effect modification. The primary subgroup variables will be gender and age group (age 55-64 vs. age 65+).
Time frame: Up to 3 years
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