Investigator

Derek Falk

Postdoctoral Research Associate · The University of Texas at Arlington, School of Social Work

About

DFDerek Falk
Papers(2)
An Evaluation of Brea…County-Level Poverty …
Institutions(1)
Department Of Social …

Papers

An Evaluation of Breast and Cervical Cancer Screening Outcomes in an Education and Patient Navigation Program in Rural and Border Texas

This study examines breast and cervical cancer screening uptake in a cancer education and patient navigation (PN) program for residents of rural and border counties in Texas by level of participation (education only, PN only, or education and PN). Data collected from March 1, 2012, to November 5, 2016, included 6663 follow-up surveys from participants aged 21-74. Logistic regression models assessed program participation on the odds of completing breast or cervical cancer screening. For women aged 40-74 years (N = 4942; mean age = 52 years), 58.4% reported a mammogram within 6 months on average from initial contact. In the breast cancer screening model, women who only received PN (OR: 6.06, CI: 4.87-7.53) or who participated in both the education plus PN program (OR: 3.33, CI: 2.77-4.02) had higher odds of mammogram screening compared to women who only received education. For women aged 21-64 years (N = 6169; mean age = 46 years), 37.7% received a Papanicolaou (Pap) test within 6 months on average from initial contact. In the Pap screening model, both education and PN (OR: 3.23, CI: 2.66-3.91) and PN only (OR: 2.35, CI: 1.88-2.93) groups had higher odds of screening for cervical cancer compared to those only receiving education. Graphed predicted probabilities examined significant interactions between race/ethnicity/language and program participation (P < 0.0001) for both screenings. PN, solely or in combination with education, is an effective strategy to increase screening for breast and cervical cancer, beyond educational outreach efforts alone, among un-/underserved, racially/ethnically diverse women in rural and border Texas counties.

County-Level Poverty and Barriers to Breast and Cervical Cancer Screening in a Health Education and Patient Navigation Program for Rural and Border Texas Residents

The study examined the impact of (1) county-level poverty rates and (2) patient navigation on breast and cervical cancer screening outcomes for women in rural and border counties in Texas reporting barriers to screening.Univariate analyses described the distribution and screening prevalence rates in the sample, while a series of random intercept logistic regression models analyzed mammogram (N = 2326 women aged 40+) and Papanicolaou (Pap; N = 2959 women aged 21-64) screening separately.Mammogram and Pap screening prevalence rates were highest among women who were aged 40-64, Spanish-speaking Latinas, lower educated, attending cancer education events because of the cost of the screenings, patient navigation recipients, living in the south region of Texas, and in counties with high poverty. Although models indicated significant variability in screening rates by county, county-level poverty was only significantly associated with odds of getting Pap screening in adjusted models. Not receiving patient navigation vs. receiving it was associated with lower odds for both mammogram (OR: 0.51, CI: 0.38-0.70) and Pap (OR: 0.69, CI: 0.50-0.94) screenings.County-level variation in screening rates exists for both mammogram and Pap tests and should be considered in the development and implementation of screening interventions in rural and border areas. However, other factors beyond poverty levels may explain the variation.

2Papers

Positions

2024–

Postdoctoral Research Associate

The University of Texas at Arlington · School of Social Work

2022–

Assistant Professor

Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine · Population and Quantitative Health Sciences

2019–

Postdoctoral Research Fellow

Wake Forest University School of Medicine · PHS-Social Sciences

Education

2018

PhD in Social Work

The University of Texas at Austin · Steve Hicks School of Social Work

2012

MSW

Washington University in St. Louis · Brown School

2010

MA in Spanish

University of Louisville · Classic and Modern Languages

2001

BA in International Economics and Spanish

University of Kentucky

Country

US

Keywords
health & mental health equity/advocacyrural health & mental healthhealth & mental health disparitieslanguage accesslinguistic inclusionacculturationsociolinguisticsapplied linguisticsfinancial hardship in care servicesimplementation sciencehealth and mental health services researchcancer survivorshipcancer screening
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