4.7 Article

Contribution of patient, physician, and environmental factors to demographic and health variation in colonoscopy follow-up for abnormal colorectal cancer screening test results

期刊

CANCER
卷 123, 期 18, 页码 3502-3512

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/cncr.30765

关键词

colonoscopy; colorectal neoplasms; early detection of cancer; diagnostic services; health services accessibility; mass screening; veterans health

类别

资金

  1. Department of Veterans Affairs Health Services Research & Development (VA HSRD) [IR 08-334-2]
  2. VA HSR&D Research Career Scientist award [RCS 10-185]
  3. VA HSR&D Career Development Award (CDA) [CDA 07-016, CDA 10-022]
  4. VA HSR&D Associated Health Postdoctoral Fellowship
  5. VA Clinical Science Research & Development Career Development Award
  6. National Institute on Aging at the National Institutes of Health [K24AG041180]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

BACKGROUNDPatient, physician, and environmental factors were identified, and the authors examined the contribution of these factors to demographic and health variation in colonoscopy follow-up after a positive fecal occult blood test/fecal immunochemical test (FOBT/FIT) screening. METHODSIn total, 76,243 FOBT/FIT-positive patients were identified from 120 Veterans Health Administration (VHA) facilities between August 16, 2009 and March 20, 2011 and were followed for 6 months. Patient demographic (race/ethnicity, sex, age, marital status) and health characteristics (comorbidities), physician characteristics (training level, whether primary care provider) and behaviors (inappropriate FOBT/FIT screening), and environmental factors (geographic access, facility type) were identified from VHA administrative records. Patient behaviors (refusal, private sector colonoscopy use) were estimated with statistical text mining conducted on clinic notes, and follow-up predictors and adjusted rates were estimated using hierarchical logistic regression. RESULTSRoughly 50% of individuals completed a colonoscopy at a VHA facility within 6 months. Age and comorbidity score were negatively associated with follow-up. Blacks were more likely to receive follow-up than whites. Environmental factors attenuated but did not fully account for these differences. Patient behaviors (refusal, private sector colonoscopy use) and physician behaviors (inappropriate screening) fully accounted for the small reverse race disparity and attenuated variation by age and comorbidity score. Patient behaviors (refusal and private sector colonoscopy use) contributed more to variation in follow-up rates than physician behaviors (inappropriate screening). CONCLUSIONSIn the VHA, blacks are more likely to receive colonoscopy follow-up for positive FOBT/FIT results than whites, and follow-up rates markedly decline with advancing age and comorbidity burden. Patient and physician behaviors explain race variation in follow-up rates and contribute to variation by age and comorbidity burden. Cancer 2017;123:3502-12. Published 2017. This article is a US Government work and is in the public domain in the USA.

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