Investigator

Ann M. Nguyen

Assistant Research Professor · Rutgers Center for State Health Policy

Research Interests

AMNAnn M. Nguyen
Papers(1)
Breast, Cervical, and…
Collaborators(5)
Jennifer TsuiJoel C. CantorXiaoling YunAdriana Corredor-Wald…Anita Y. Kinney
Institutions(3)
Rutgers The State Uni…University Of Souther…North Central State C…

Papers

Breast, Cervical, and Colorectal Cancer Screening Among New Jersey Medicaid Enrollees: 2017-2022

PURPOSE The COVID-19 pandemic disrupted cancer screenings in the United States, with disproportionate impact on health disparity populations. The objective of this study was to examine the impact of the pandemic on routine screening for breast, cervical, and colorectal cancer among Medicaid enrollees. MATERIALS AND METHODS This study is a retrospective, descriptive analysis to estimate the rate of breast, colorectal, and cervical cancer screenings among Medicaid enrollees age 50-75 years in New Jersey. Secondary enrollment and claims from the 2017-2022 Medicaid Management Information System were used. The results were stratified by screening type and socioeconomic factors. Bivariate analysis assessed between-group differences. RESULTS Although April 2020 had the lowest screening rates in the 6-year period, rates for all three cancer types rebounded to prepandemic levels by late summer 2020. In 2022, breast cancer screening rates exceeded previous peaks. However, cervical and colorectal screening rates did not resume their prepandemic trajectories. Key findings comparing 2022 with 2019 were (1) across all three cancer screening groups, the younger group (50-64 years) had a higher screening rate than the older group (65-75 years); (2) Hispanic enrollees consistently had the highest screening rates; (3) the screening rate among dually eligible enrollees increased throughout the pandemic; and (4) there was wide screening variation by geographic region. CONCLUSION Multilevel, multisectoral approaches, including policy and health system strategies, are critical to addressing gaps in care for Medicaid enrollees. Future efforts should focus on bolstering cervical and colorectal cancer screening rates and ensuring equitable access to cancer screening and treatment.

40Works
1Papers
5Collaborators
Early Detection of CancerColorectal NeoplasmsNeoplasmsBreast NeoplasmsUterine Cervical NeoplasmsCardiovascular Diseases

Positions

2020–

Assistant Research Professor

Rutgers Center for State Health Policy

2020–

Affiliate Faculty

Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School · Department of Family Medicine & Community Health

2013–

Research Assistant

University of Washington

2011–

Project Coordinator

Palomar Health · Organizational Learning & Development

2012–

Summer Fellow

Yale University · Yale Entrepreneurial Institute

2011–

Public Administration Analyst

UCLA Center for Health Policy Research

2010–

Graduate Student Intern

St. Joseph Health · Community Health

2006–

Manager

COPE Health Solutions · Health Workforce Transformation

Education

2020

Postdoctoral Fellow

NYU Langone Health · Population Health

2018

PhD

University of Washington · Health Services

2011

MPH

University of California Irvine · Epidemiology

2009

BS

University of California Irvine · Biomedical Engineering

Keywords
health services researchimplementation sciencephysician integrationprimary carepractice transformationworkforceintegrated behavioral health