Grant Details
Grant Number: |
3P01CA072085-05S1 Interpret this number |
Primary Investigator: |
Hollis, Jack |
Organization: |
Kaiser Foundation Research Institute |
Project Title: |
Patient Focused Cancer Control in an Hmo Population |
Fiscal Year: |
2001 |
Abstract
The theme of the proposed CPRU is to improve the organization and delivery
of cancer control services in manage care. The investigators propose a
CPRU to extend the previous work, expand the collaboration of CHR and ORI,
initiate development of work in two areas new to us that are important to
managed care, to add new investigators to our cancer control research team
including two young investigators without previous cancer control
experience, and to enhance the opportunities for working with a large
managed care organization to develop a rational approach to designing,
testing, evaluating and implementing cancer control strategies.
Project I will test an innovative expert systems model developed at the
University of Rhode Island in a medical setting. No adolescent smoking
prevention or cessation programs have had a demonstrable long-term impact
on teenage smoking. This sophisticated, interactive video provides stage-
appropriate smoking prevention/cessation interventions. For adults, we
have already shown that the medical encounter is uniquely effective as a
vehicle for delivering effective smoking interventions. This project will
apply those lessons to adolescent interventions. Project 2 will use the
successful outpatient TRACC 1 smoking intervention s a model for delivery
of an intervention designed to reduce dietary fat. There are no low-
intensity interventions proven to have a long-term impact on dietary fat
consumption. We will determine whether an inexpensive, brief dietary
counseling approach incorporated into routine primary care can reduce blood
lipids and long-term risk of cancer. Project 3 examines the impact of
coordinating integrating, and prioritizing the delivery of cancer
prevention services ot a population of underserved health plan members.
There are multiple, often conflicting, systems and recommendations for
delivering cancer control services. This project focuses on women who fall
into the mammography and pap smear safety nets and women who smoke. Two
developmental projects will initiate new areas of research for us; genetic
screening and its implications for cancer control, and quality of life
studies among cancer patients. Both developmental projects involve young
investigators new to cancer control. The projects will be served by a core
that provides data management, quality control, economic analyses,
biostatistics, and analysis support.
Publications
None. See parent grant details.