How breast cancer care is coordinated in hospitals serving predominantly minority women.
e17592 Background: Underuse of adjuvant breast cancer treatment results from system failures and occurs more commonly in minority women. We assessed organizational processes associated with care coordination prior to implementing an intervention. Methods: We interviewed 29 clinical and 20 administrative key informants from 6 hospitals with high volumes of minority breast cancer patients. We analyzed qualitative interview data using the constant comparative method. Results: Hospitals varied in approaches to coordinate adjuvant therapy delivery. All hospitals made a “basic” effort to follow up with patients who missed appointments (e.g., certified letters), but some sites included “extra” efforts such as clinician calls. Processes to coordinate handoffs among providers involved use of clerical staff to reach out across specialties in most sites; several sites also explicitly involved clinicians. Effective tracking and handoffs were hindered where electronic health record (EHR) systems were not fully integrated. A critical distinction was whether breast cancer care delivery was integrated within the hospital. Better integration appeared to facilitate communication among clinicians, as well as promote service coordination. Accountability was an important factor contributing to integration, particularly in sites that were less integrated. Conclusions: Appropriate delivery of adjuvant therapies to breast cancer patients appears to be facilitated by better integration of care and services within the hospitals we studied. A fully integrated EHR and enhanced processes for tracking no shows and supporting handoffs seemed to increase integration in these hospitals. Integration was further facilitated when there was accountability for results. Strong clinical leadership can promote integration, but its impact may be lessened if hospitals’ processes are integrated. [Table: see text]