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Active NON-SBIR/STTR RPGS NIH (US)

Enhancing Primary Care Capacity for Cancer Survivorship Care Delivery in Community Health Clinics

$9.98M USD

Funder NATIONAL CANCER INSTITUTE
Recipient Organization University of Texas Hlth Sci Ctr Houston
Country United States
Start Date Jun 20, 2024
End Date May 31, 2029
Duration 1,806 days
Number of Grantees 2
Roles Principal Investigator; Co-Investigator
Data Source NIH (US)
Grant ID 10893174
Grant Description

PROJECT SUMMARY The US has over 18 million cancer survivors (persons diagnosed with cancer no matter where they are in the course of their disease), estimated to increase to 22 million by 2030. The majority of formalized cancer survivorship care is organized and delivered by oncology, often through academic and private cancer centers.

Because 70% of cancer survivors also have other chronic conditions and receive care from multiple clinical teams, suboptimal coordination of that care poses a significant barrier to optimal health outcomes. The growing number of survivors and anticipated shortage of oncology subspecialists pose significant additional challenges

to delivering high quality survivorship care. Primary care is uniquely suited to deliver whole person and coordinated care for cancer survivors because, at its core, it prioritizes, personalizes, and integrates health care for all conditions. This view is endorsed by the National Academy of Medicine and National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) guidelines recommend

that cancer survivors stay connected with their primary care clinicians (PCCs). Despite this growing recognition of the importance of primary care, primary care teams experience key challenges in delivering high-quality survivorship care especially for under- and uninsured cancer survivors who experience disproportionately

worse health outcomes and rely on community health centers (CHCs) for consistent health care. Leveraging our team has a 10-year program of research in Texas CHCs, we propose a pragmatic trial testing implementation and effectiveness of a primary care-based survivorship care delivery intervention among eight

Texas CHC sites. Specifically, we propose to: (1) Implement a system-level cancer survivorship care delivery intervention in partnership with CHC clinicians, patients, and community representatives. (2) Test effectiveness of the intervention to improve patient and clinician outcomes using a stepped-wedge

cluster-randomized trial design. (3) Evaluate implementation of the intervention using an iterative, concurrent mixed-methods approach guided by the Practice Change Model. Our overall study is guided by the Practical, Robust, Implementation, & Sustainability Model (PRISM) to maximize implementation and sustainment within each CHC’s local context. Our study recognizes the reality

that care of underserved cancer survivors is increasingly occurring in primary care CHCs. Together with our CHC partners, we will generate the evidence-base needed for a generalist primary care-based care delivery model with the goal of disseminating and scaling to optimize cancer survivorship care equitably.

All Grantees

University of Texas Hlth Sci Ctr Houston

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