A NURSE PRACTITIONER INTERVENTION TO INCREASE BREAST AND CERVICAL-CANCER SCREENING FOR POOR, ELDERLY BLACK-WOMEN

Citation
J. Mandelblatt et al., A NURSE PRACTITIONER INTERVENTION TO INCREASE BREAST AND CERVICAL-CANCER SCREENING FOR POOR, ELDERLY BLACK-WOMEN, Journal of general internal medicine, 8(4), 1993, pp. 173-178
Citations number
NO
ISSN journal
08848734
Volume
8
Issue
4
Year of publication
1993
Pages
173 - 178
Database
ISI
SICI code
0884-8734(1993)8:4<173:ANPITI>2.0.ZU;2-0
Abstract
Objective: To compare nurse practitioner (NP) and physician rates of b reast and cervical cancer screening among poor, elderly black women. D esign: A quasi-experimental design was used to compare pre- and postin tervention annual screening rates. Rates were determined by medical re cord audits. Setting: Two urban public hospital primary care clinics s erved as the study sites. Patients: All women aged 65 years or more we re eligible to participate. Interventions: Women were offered screenin g by a NP during a routine visit in the intervention site; a physician reminder system was used in the control site. Main results: Baseline annual screening rates were comparable in the two study sites. At the end of the study period, rates were significantly higher in the NP sit e, compared with the control. In the NP clinic, the annual rate of Pap tests increased to 56.9% from the baseline of 17.8%, and mammographie s increased to 40% from 18.3%. In comparison, rates remained low in th e control site, increasing only to 18.2% of women receiving Pap tests from a baseline of 11.8%, and remaining at 18% for mammography. Conclu sions: Use of a NP to deliver same-day screening is an effective strat egy to target poor, elderly black women for breast and cervical cancer screening. However, even with the substantial increases in rates obta ined with the NP intervention, screening in this vulnerable population remains below nationally targeted levels.