Conducting Outreach to Improve Cervical Cancer Screening Rates Among Underscreened Patients
Uterine Cervical Neoplasms
About this trial
This is an interventional screening trial for Uterine Cervical Neoplasms
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- Female or female-to-male transgender patients with a cervix
- HIV-negative
- Medical appointment at Fenway Community Health during calendar year 2012 who have not had a Pap smear in the past 3 years (since January 2010)
Exclusion Criteria:
- HIV-positive (due to different Pap testing guidelines)
- Male-to-female transgender patients
- Patients with a history of a hysterectomy, unless specified as partial or supracervical
- Patients aged 30-64 who had a negative Pap test in the past 5 years with simultaneous negative Human papillomavirus infection (HPV) co-testing
Sites / Locations
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Arm 3
Arm 4
Arm 5
No Intervention
Experimental
Experimental
Experimental
Experimental
Usual care / opportunistic screening
Letter and informational sheet
Phone
Multimodal
This group will not be contacted by the study team in any way and will receive the general standard of care at Fenway. Patient charts are reviewed by the provider and medical team shortly before a scheduled visit to determine if the patient is due for a Pap, and if so, the patient is offered a Pap during the visit or the chance to schedule one for another date. Any proactive outreach occurs infrequently and at an ad-hoc basis, but should any proactive outreach occur, the study team will not interfere.
The patients in this group will be mailed a letter at time 0. The letter will inform the patient that she is overdue for a Pap and will also contain an informational sheet about cervical cancer and Pap tests. If the patient does not contact Fenway within 1 month to schedule an appointment, an additional letter will be sent at 1 month, and similarly again at 2 months. These letters will be the same, except that letters two and three will mention that previous attempts have been made at contact. Based on best practices in the literature, the letters will be signed by the patient's primary care provider.
The same text shared in the letter will be sent as an email to the patients in this intervention group, again at time 0, 1, and 2 months, as necessary for nonresponders. The email will be sent from the provider's email account. The email will have an informational sheet attached or included in the body of the email. The emails will be sent through MyFenway, the secure, Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA)-compliant patient contact system at Fenway.
The patient will be telephoned and informed that they are due for a Pap, and given the opportunity to schedule an appointment over the phone immediately. As per HIPAA regulations, if the patient does not answer, a voicemail will be left saying that a Fenway representative has called and request that the patient calls back, but a reason will not be given. Some, but not all of the information contained in the info sheet will be provided during the call (see phone script). The script used is consistent with the scripts used currently for patient outreach. A voicemail will still count as one outreach attempt out of three. Patients will be contacted at time 0, 1, and 2 months as necessary for nonresponders.
The patient will be sent a letter/informational sheet at time 0. If she does not respond within one month, she will be sent an email. If she does not respond by 2 months after the start of the intervention period, she will be called. If a patient randomly selected for this group does not have an email listed, she will receive one letter and two phone calls.