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Lung Cancer Screening Eligibility and Referral Practices in Texas Organizations Serving People with Substance Use Disorders

SIMPLE SUMMARY: People with substance use disorders have extremely elevated rates of smoking and, therefore, are a priority population for lung cancer screening. This paper examines the lung cancer screening practices—determining patients’ eligibility for lung cancer screening and making referrals t...

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Autores principales: Britton, Maggie, Chen, Tzuan A., Martinez Leal, Isabel, Rogova, Anastasia, Kyburz, Bryce, Williams, Teresa, Patel, Mayuri, El-Zein, Randa, Bernicker, Eric H., Lowenstein, Lisa M., Reitzel, Lorraine R.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10093429/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37046736
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers15072073
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author Britton, Maggie
Chen, Tzuan A.
Martinez Leal, Isabel
Rogova, Anastasia
Kyburz, Bryce
Williams, Teresa
Patel, Mayuri
El-Zein, Randa
Bernicker, Eric H.
Lowenstein, Lisa M.
Reitzel, Lorraine R.
author_facet Britton, Maggie
Chen, Tzuan A.
Martinez Leal, Isabel
Rogova, Anastasia
Kyburz, Bryce
Williams, Teresa
Patel, Mayuri
El-Zein, Randa
Bernicker, Eric H.
Lowenstein, Lisa M.
Reitzel, Lorraine R.
author_sort Britton, Maggie
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: People with substance use disorders have extremely elevated rates of smoking and, therefore, are a priority population for lung cancer screening. This paper examines the lung cancer screening practices—determining patients’ eligibility for lung cancer screening and making referrals to screening—of Texas healthcare organizations that provide services to people with substance use disorders. This work demonstrated that few organizations are determining patients’ eligibility and even fewer are making referrals. While not all organizations have the capability to make referrals (i.e., no on-site prescriber), they each have a vital role to play in eligibility determination and patient education. There is a need for researchers to focus intervention and implementation efforts within these organizations to increase capacity and ensure that patients are being navigated to lung cancer screening at multiple touch points across the healthcare continuum. ABSTRACT: For people at elevated risk for lung cancer, lung cancer screening (LCS) reduces lung cancer mortality. People with non-nicotine substance use disorders (SUDs) have elevated rates of smoking compared with the general population, highlighting them as a priority population for LCS consideration. Although research has shown LCS is underutilized, there is little literature to inform whether organizations that serve individuals with SUDs have existing clinical protocols surrounding LCS. In the current study, we examine the LCS eligibility and referral practices among these organizations. We conducted a statewide needs assessment survey in 2021 to discern how tobacco use was being addressed at Texas organizations that provide treatment or services to individuals with SUDs. Respondents were asked to report on their center’s LCS eligibility and referral practices. The analytic sample consists of 125 respondents who represented 23 federally qualified health centers, 29 global local mental health authorities (LMHAs), 12 substance use treatment programs in LMHAs, and 61 standalone substance use treatment centers. Very few respondents indicated that healthcare providers at their center made referrals to LCS for patients (8.8%); a few respondents indicated that their healthcare providers assessed patients’ eligibility for LCS but did not make referrals (3.2%). Intervention and implementation efforts are needed in these and other SUD healthcare settings to bolster organizational capacity and ensure that patients are being navigated to lung cancer screening at multiple touch points across the care continuum.
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spelling pubmed-100934292023-04-13 Lung Cancer Screening Eligibility and Referral Practices in Texas Organizations Serving People with Substance Use Disorders Britton, Maggie Chen, Tzuan A. Martinez Leal, Isabel Rogova, Anastasia Kyburz, Bryce Williams, Teresa Patel, Mayuri El-Zein, Randa Bernicker, Eric H. Lowenstein, Lisa M. Reitzel, Lorraine R. Cancers (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: People with substance use disorders have extremely elevated rates of smoking and, therefore, are a priority population for lung cancer screening. This paper examines the lung cancer screening practices—determining patients’ eligibility for lung cancer screening and making referrals to screening—of Texas healthcare organizations that provide services to people with substance use disorders. This work demonstrated that few organizations are determining patients’ eligibility and even fewer are making referrals. While not all organizations have the capability to make referrals (i.e., no on-site prescriber), they each have a vital role to play in eligibility determination and patient education. There is a need for researchers to focus intervention and implementation efforts within these organizations to increase capacity and ensure that patients are being navigated to lung cancer screening at multiple touch points across the healthcare continuum. ABSTRACT: For people at elevated risk for lung cancer, lung cancer screening (LCS) reduces lung cancer mortality. People with non-nicotine substance use disorders (SUDs) have elevated rates of smoking compared with the general population, highlighting them as a priority population for LCS consideration. Although research has shown LCS is underutilized, there is little literature to inform whether organizations that serve individuals with SUDs have existing clinical protocols surrounding LCS. In the current study, we examine the LCS eligibility and referral practices among these organizations. We conducted a statewide needs assessment survey in 2021 to discern how tobacco use was being addressed at Texas organizations that provide treatment or services to individuals with SUDs. Respondents were asked to report on their center’s LCS eligibility and referral practices. The analytic sample consists of 125 respondents who represented 23 federally qualified health centers, 29 global local mental health authorities (LMHAs), 12 substance use treatment programs in LMHAs, and 61 standalone substance use treatment centers. Very few respondents indicated that healthcare providers at their center made referrals to LCS for patients (8.8%); a few respondents indicated that their healthcare providers assessed patients’ eligibility for LCS but did not make referrals (3.2%). Intervention and implementation efforts are needed in these and other SUD healthcare settings to bolster organizational capacity and ensure that patients are being navigated to lung cancer screening at multiple touch points across the care continuum. MDPI 2023-03-30 /pmc/articles/PMC10093429/ /pubmed/37046736 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers15072073 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Britton, Maggie
Chen, Tzuan A.
Martinez Leal, Isabel
Rogova, Anastasia
Kyburz, Bryce
Williams, Teresa
Patel, Mayuri
El-Zein, Randa
Bernicker, Eric H.
Lowenstein, Lisa M.
Reitzel, Lorraine R.
Lung Cancer Screening Eligibility and Referral Practices in Texas Organizations Serving People with Substance Use Disorders
title Lung Cancer Screening Eligibility and Referral Practices in Texas Organizations Serving People with Substance Use Disorders
title_full Lung Cancer Screening Eligibility and Referral Practices in Texas Organizations Serving People with Substance Use Disorders
title_fullStr Lung Cancer Screening Eligibility and Referral Practices in Texas Organizations Serving People with Substance Use Disorders
title_full_unstemmed Lung Cancer Screening Eligibility and Referral Practices in Texas Organizations Serving People with Substance Use Disorders
title_short Lung Cancer Screening Eligibility and Referral Practices in Texas Organizations Serving People with Substance Use Disorders
title_sort lung cancer screening eligibility and referral practices in texas organizations serving people with substance use disorders
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10093429/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37046736
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers15072073
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