posted on 2014-01-27, 00:00authored bySilvia Tejeda, Julie S. Darnell, Young I. Cho, Melinda R. Stolley, Talar W. Markossian, Elizabeth A. Calhoun
Background: Women with breast or cervical cancer abnormalities can experience barriers to timely follow-up
care, resulting in delays in cancer diagnosis. Patient navigation programs that identify and remove barriers to
ensure timely receipt of care are proliferating nationally. The study used a systematic framework to describe
barriers, including differences between African American and Latina women; to determine recurrence of barriers;
and to examine factors associated with barriers to follow-up care.
Methods: Data originated from 250 women in the intervention arm of the Chicago Patient Navigation Research
Program (PNRP). The women had abnormal cancer screening findings and navigator encounters. Women were
recruited from a community health center and a publicly owned medical center. After describing proportions of
African American and Latina women experiencing particular barriers, logistic regression was used to explore
associations between patient characteristics, such as race/ethnicity, and type of barriers.
Results: The most frequent barriers occurred at the intrapersonal level (e.g., insurance issues and fear), while
institutional-level barriers such as system problems with scheduling care were the most commonly recurring
over time (29%). The majority of barriers (58%) were reported in the first navigator encounter. Latinas (81%)
reported barriers more often than African American women (19%). Differences in race/ethnicity and employment
status were associated with types of barriers. Compared to African American women, Latinas were more
likely to report an intrapersonal level barrier. Unemployed women were more likely to report an institutional
level barrier.
Conclusion: In a sample of highly vulnerable women, there is no single characteristic (e.g., uninsured) that
predicts what kinds of barriers a woman is likely to have. Nevertheless, navigators appear able to easily resolve
intrapersonal-level barriers, but ongoing navigation is needed to address system-level barriers. Patient navigation
programs can adopt the PNRP barriers framework to assist their efforts in assuring timely follow-up care.
Funding
NIH grants P50
CA106743-07S1, R25 CA057699, and U01 CA116875.