Investigator

Diana S.M. Buist

Affiliate Professor · University of Washington, Health Systems and Population Health

DSBDiana S.M. Buist
Papers(1)
Promoting cervical ca…
Collaborators(4)
Jasmin A TiroJohn LinMeera MuthukrishnanCaitlin N. Dorsey
Institutions(4)
Unknown InstitutionUniversity Of ChicagoUniversity of Washing…Taylor Family Institu…

Papers

Promoting cervical cancer screening via a mailed HPV self-collection kit: Reactions from screeners and non-screeners.

Mailed human papillomavirus self-collection (HPV-SC) kits improve cervical cancer screening adherence; however, not all respond to kit invitations. This qualitative study sought to understand reactions to HPV-SC kit invitation among screeners and non-screeners in the STEP trial, a pragmatic trial offering kits. Kaiser Permanente Washington patients randomized to the STEP trial's kit intervention arms, received educational materials and were notified they would receive a kit in one week (direct mail) or given information on how to request a kit (opt-in). Materials highlighted cancer risk, screening importance, test differences (Pap, HPV), and what to expect with abnormal results. Based on their screening status 6 months post-randomization, two categories of patients were invited for focus groups: 1) screeners with negative kit results or clinician-performed test; 2) non-screeners. We oversampled non-white patients. Six online focus groups were conducted from May to June 2022 with 40 patients (29 screeners, 11 non-screeners). A facilitator asked about HPV and cervical cancer knowledge, reaction to the kit and educational materials, and screening preference (self- vs. clinician-collected). Field notes and transcripts were analyzed by five coders using iterative content analysis. Participants desired more flexibility during the invitation process, preferring multiple methods (mail, patient portal, text, in-clinic distribution) and support services (website, nurse-staffed phone). Educational resources acknowledging different learning styles (print, diagrams, audio-visual) and for specific populations (LGBTQ, monogamous) were suggested. Participants recommended clinicians reinforce kit efficacy to encourage use. Trust in the kit and in the health care system were key to ensure comfort with self-collection. Multiple, diverse outreach strategies are needed to engage patients in screening with this new modality. Flexible engagement by the healthcare system with comprehensive educational materials inclusive of diverse populations, and provider encouragement are needed to build patients' trust in, comfort with, and use of HPV-SC tests. ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT04679675.

32Works
1Papers
4Collaborators
Breast NeoplasmsCancer SurvivorsEarly Detection of CancerNeoplasms, Second PrimaryCardiovascular DiseasesCarcinoma, Intraductal, NoninfiltratingNeoplasm Recurrence, Local

Positions

Affiliate Professor

University of Washington · Health Systems and Population Health

2024–

Founder, Principal

Data-driven Strategies for Medicine & Biotechnology

2022–

Senior Director

Grail (United States) · Medical Affairs

1996–

Director of Research and Strategic Partnerships

Kaiser Permanente Washington · Health Research Institute

Education

1999

PhD

University of Washington · Epidemiology

1995

MPH

Yale University School of Public Health · Epidemiology

1992

BA

University of California, Santa Barbara · Biological Sciences

Country

US

Keywords
learning health systemcomparative effectivenesscancer epidemiologyepidemiologyoutcomes research