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Grant Details

Grant Number: 1R21CA215252-01A1 Interpret this number
Primary Investigator: Molina, Yamile
Organization: University Of Illinois At Chicago
Project Title: Assessing and Modeling Network-Level Consequences of Patient Navigation
Fiscal Year: 2018


Abstract

Increasing the number of African American (AA) women who are diagnosed with breast cancer at early stages is a public health priority. Patient navigation has been developed to address this problem and is increasingly widespread in public health practice. This individual-level strategy may have greater impacts than have been previously estimated. Based on diffusion of innovation theories and our previous research, we hypothesize that navigation may indirectly benefit patients' female relatives and non-relative friends (“alters”) and, subsequently, population-level stage at diagnosis. Briefly, navigators coordinate care and provide informational, emotional, and logistic support to patients. Receiving these additional supports has been associated with greater breast cancer knowledge, medical system trust/knowledge, and breast cancer-specific communication self-efficacy among navigated women. Empowering breast cancer patients through navigation may manifest in greater survivor-driven dissemination to individuals known pre-diagnosis (induction). Survivors may also have greater motivation to engage new individuals as a breast cancer leader (node addition, key network position). These network changes and greater dissemination may result in greater rates of breast cancer-related shared decision making practices, risk assessment, and screening among the alters of navigated women compared to alters of non-navigated women. This may result in improved stage at diagnosis at the population-level. Including network effects in economic evaluations may also reveal lower incremental costs for implementing patient navigation than previously estimated. We will leverage system science methodologies (social network analysis, agent-based modeling) to test these hypotheses and model how patient navigation may inadvertently improve the likelihood of early stage diagnoses at the population-level. In Aim 1, we will recruit AA breast cancer patients from a completed, NIH-funded randomized controlled trial in South Chicago to compare patterns of breast cancer communication among 50 navigated and 50 non-navigated women using standard egocentric network instruments. The primary outcomes will be the number of women to whom AA breast cancer patients initiated conversations about breast cancer and the frequency of these conversations. Next, we will compare breast cancer care among 150 family and friends identified by navigated and non-navigated women. The primary outcomes will be breast cancer-related shared decision making practices with primary care providers, risk assessment (genetic counseling, genetic testing), and breast cancer screening uptake. Finally, we will determine the incremental costs of navigation compared to standard care for each additional stage at diagnosis (including patients and their family/friends). In Aim 2, we will use published literature and other local data sources to model improved population-level breast health as an emergent property from one agent (the breast cancer patient) to other agents (relative/non-relative) using an agent-based model that incorporates biological, intrapersonal, interpersonal, and network-level characteristics.



Publications

The Integration of Value Assessment and Social Network Methods for Breast Health Navigation Among African Americans.
Authors: Molina Y. , Kao S.Y. , Bergeron N.Q. , Strayhorn-Carter S.M. , Strahan D.C. , Asche C. , Watson K.S. , Khanna A.S. , Hempstead B. , Fitzpatrick V. , et al. .
Source: Value In Health : The Journal Of The International Society For Pharmacoeconomics And Outcomes Research, 2023-06-09 00:00:00.0; , .
EPub date: 2023-06-09 00:00:00.0.
PMID: 37301367
Related Citations

Patient Navigation Can Improve Breast Cancer Outcomes among African American Women in Chicago: Insights from a Modeling Study.
Authors: Khanna A.S. , Brickman B. , Cronin M. , Bergeron N.Q. , Scheel J.R. , Hibdon J. , Calhoun E.A. , Watson K.S. , Strayhorn S.M. , Molina Y. .
Source: Journal Of Urban Health : Bulletin Of The New York Academy Of Medicine, 2022-08-08 00:00:00.0; , .
EPub date: 2022-08-08 00:00:00.0.
PMID: 35941401
Related Citations

Navigated African American breast cancer patients as incidental change agents in their family/friend networks.
Authors: Molina Y. , Strayhorn S.M. , Bergeron N.Q. , Strahan D.C. , Villines D. , Fitzpatrick V. , Calhoun E.A. , Fitzgibbon M.L. , Kim S.J. , Watson K.S. , et al. .
Source: Supportive Care In Cancer : Official Journal Of The Multinational Association Of Supportive Care In Cancer, 2022 Mar; 30(3), p. 2487-2496.
EPub date: 2021-11-16 00:00:00.0.
PMID: 34783907
Related Citations

Healthcare Predictors of Information Dissemination About Genetic Risks.
Authors: Henderson V. , Strayhorn S.M. , Bergeron N.Q. , Strahan D.C. , Ganschow P.S. , Khanna A.S. , Watson K. , Hoskins K. , Molina Y. .
Source: Cancer Control : Journal Of The Moffitt Cancer Center, 2022 Jan-Dec; 29, p. 10732748221104666.
PMID: 35658635
Related Citations

Understanding the relationship between positive and negative social support and the quality of life among African American breast cancer survivors.
Authors: Strayhorn S.M. , Bergeron N.Q. , Strahan D.C. , Villines D. , Fitzpatrick V. , Watson K.S. , Khanna A. , Molina Y. .
Source: Supportive Care In Cancer : Official Journal Of The Multinational Association Of Supportive Care In Cancer, 2021-02-25 00:00:00.0; , .
EPub date: 2021-02-25 00:00:00.0.
PMID: 33630156
Related Citations



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