Chasing the Nationally Under Screened Cancer: A Quality-Improvement Project to Increase Lung Cancer Screening in a Resident-Run Outpatient Clinic

Author(s):  
K. Vijaykumar ◽  
J. Hanna ◽  
J. Lenka ◽  
A. Mohamed ◽  
A. Waktola ◽  
...  
2015 ◽  
Vol 33 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. 6530-6530
Author(s):  
Rami Manochakian ◽  
Jennifer Smith ◽  
Stephanie Mervar ◽  
Deborah Fox ◽  
Kauzy Woods ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 37 (27_suppl) ◽  
pp. 164-164
Author(s):  
Laura Lee Hall ◽  
Joseph Weigel ◽  
Grace Libby Campbell ◽  
Will Miller ◽  
J'Aimee Louis ◽  
...  

164 Background: Kentucky is the epicenter of smoking and lung cancer in the U.S.: over half the population is a current or former smoker (second only to WV); and it has the highest annual lung cancer incidence—89.6 per 100,000 population—according to the most recent CDC data. While offering a significant, double-digit death benefit due to early recognition and improved therapies, LDCT lung cancer screening of at-risk individuals remains extremely low. Helping primary care practices identify their at-risk patients, promote reduced tobacco use, and refer for screening is critical. Methods: In this pilot, family practice and internal medicine practices, residency programs, and federally qualified health centers (FQHCs) were recruited in rural regions of Eastern Kentucky with populations at highest risk. The Sustainable Healthy Communities Quality Improvement Education (SHC-QIE) model—which engages multidisciplinary practice leaders, rapid cycle improvement or a PDSA approach to QI, geoanalytics, and community engagement support—was implemented to promote better screening while enhancing clinician satisfaction. Results: Each practice significantly improved their identification of smokers and patients qualifying for lung cancer screening in the Medicare program as well as screening referrals by nearly 2-fold. For example, in one FQHC, accurate reporting of tobacco history data in the medical record increased from 34.6% to 56.9%. Another example showed referrals for LDCTs increased from 230 in 2017 to 412 in 2018, with a 71% increase over baseline. While survey data from the participating clinics conceded challenges in implementing a QI initiative, significant satisfaction with the initiative, ongoing plans for activities building on the program, and community engagement were found as well. Pre-, post-survey data also revealed significant improvement in screening, tobacco counseling, and LDCT referral. Conclusions: In spite of EMR barriers, significant increases in smoking history taking, counseling for tobacco cessation, and referral for lung cancer screening was achieved over the course of 9 months.


CHEST Journal ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 154 (4) ◽  
pp. 659A
Author(s):  
CARLOS RODRIGUEZ-BONILLA ◽  
ANAVELAZQUEZ MANANA ◽  
ALAN TSO

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