Abstract
114 Background: Although advances in anticancer treatment have improved survival of patients with cancer overall, cancer mortality rates remain disproportionately high in rural areas. Disparities in rural cancer health outcomes are partially attributed to challenges with care coordination in rural areas. However, little is known about rural-urban differences in patients’ perception of cancer care coordination. In this exploratory study, we compared rural and urban cancer patients’ perception of care coordination (CC) using a Care Coordination Instrument (CCI), a validated self-report measure. Methods: We conducted a secondary analysis of cross-sectional survey data from two community-based cancer care delivery studies from 2018 and 2019 focused on cancer patients’ perception of CC. Patients receiving active therapy for any cancer completed a 29-item CCI. The CCI assesses overall perceptions of CC (Total) and across 3 domains: Communication, Navigation, and Operational. The rural patient cohort was derived from the American Cancer Society Hope Lodge Hawaii, which provides lodging for patients from neighbor islands (rural) receiving cancer care on Oahu (urban). The urban comparison group included patients residing on Oahu. Multivariate regression analyses were conducted to compare rural and urban patients’ perception of CC with adjustment for age, gender, and cancer type. Results: Data from 243 patients were analyzed; 23 (9.5%) were rural and 220 (90.5%) were urban. The rural and urban groups were similar with respect to patient demographics (age, gender) and clinical status. Rural patients reported significantly lower overall mean CCI scores than urban patients (54.7 vs 61.6; p = .02). Rural-urban differences in patients’ perception of CC were found for Communication (29.5 vs 35.1; p = .004) and Operational (19.7 vs 22.0; p = .02) domains. There were no rural-urban differences for Navigation. Conclusions: Our results demonstrate that rural patients had significantly poorer perception of care coordination overall than urban patients. Specifically, the observed rural vs urban differences in patients’ perception of care coordination were related to communication and operational challenges. Required coordination with a patient navigator to facilitate access to Hope Lodge may have confounded analysis in the Navigation domain. These findings highlight the need for interventions to address communication and operational CC challenges for rural patients in order to improve the quality of cancer care and reduce health disparities for rural cancer patients.
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