Abstract C67: Colorectal cancer screening in rural and frontier communities: The FluFIT on the Frontera Project

The prevalence of colorectal cancer screening among people living in Texas-Mexico, rural/frontier Border communities and colonias is not well characterized. While colorectal cancer screening in the Border region is 30%, among Hispanics, FOBT screening in the prior 2 years is 9.4%, and 59% of screeni...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:Cancer epidemiology, biomarkers & prevention biomarkers & prevention, 2017-02, Vol.26 (2_Supplement), p.C67-C67
Hauptverfasser: Hurd, Thelma C., Lozano, Ceci, Sotelo, Simon, Adame, Samantha, Rodriguez, Raquel, Guerra, Hector, Sunil, Thankam
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
Online-Zugang:Volltext
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:The prevalence of colorectal cancer screening among people living in Texas-Mexico, rural/frontier Border communities and colonias is not well characterized. While colorectal cancer screening in the Border region is 30%, among Hispanics, FOBT screening in the prior 2 years is 9.4%, and 59% of screening eligible adults have never had endoscopy (Texas BRFSS 2010). The FluFIT on the Frontera project, a colorectal cancer screening project for average risk people, was adapted from the evidence based FluFIT curriculum and implemented in a rural/frontier community setting to increase colorectal cancer screening. The project provides education, screening, early detection and treatment through community and regional partnerships. It targets Hispanic and underserved men and women aged 50-75 years of age who reside in the rural/frontier communities of Del Rio Texas and the surrounding colonias. Methods Clinic based providers and certified male and female promotores from Val Verde Regional Medical Center and QUAD Counties Promotoras Program, respectively, received formal didactic and implementation training for the FluFIT intervention. Participants received colorectal cancer screening education and FluFIT test process instruction from trained staff in the clinical setting and promotores in the community setting. Clinic and community based navigators provided participant navigation to insure timely receipt of specimens for analysis and follow-up. Participants who did not have a primary care provider were assigned to a provider in the Val Verde Regional Medical Center primary care clinic. All test results were provided to participants by either their assigned or private primary care providers. An integrated clinic and community based provider, navigator and project partnership assured referral for appropriate services as needed for positive tests. Results In the first 7 months of community programming 3743 community members were educated in either group or individual settings. Of these, 1959 adults (789 males, 40%; 1170 females) aged 50-75 years were evaluated for screening. Seventy five percent self-identified as white Hispanic and 25% as non-Hispanic. 753 met the screening eligibility criteria and 1206 did not. Of 753 (38.4%) who were screening eligible, 563 (74.8%) received FIT kits. Among 342 kits (60.7%) that were returned, 14 (12.57%) were positive. Colonoscopy was completed in 79% of patients with a positive FIT test and polyps were identified in 7. No cancers wer
ISSN:1055-9965
1538-7755
DOI:10.1158/1538-7755.DISP16-C67