Critical lessons from a pragmatic randomized trial of home‐based COVID‐19 testing in rural Native American and Latino communities

Author:

Webber Eliza1ORCID,Bishop Sonia2,Drain Paul K.345,Dupuis Virgil6,Garza Lorenzo7,Gregor Charlie8,Hassell Laurie8,Ibarra Geno2,Kessler Larry8,Ko Linda289ORCID,Lambert Alison4810,Lyon Victoria2,Rowe Carly8,Singleton Michael8,Thompson Matthew811,Warne Teresa1,Westbroek Wendy6,Adams Alexandra1

Affiliation:

1. Center for American Indian and Rural Health Equity Montana State University Bozeman Montana USA

2. Division of Public Health Sciences Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center Seattle Washington USA

3. Department of Global Health University of Washington Seattle Washington USA

4. Department of Medicine University of Washington Seattle Washington USA

5. Department of Epidemiology University of Washington Seattle Washington USA

6. Extension Office Salish Kootenai College Pablo Montana USA

7. Family and Community Engagement Sunnyside School District Sunnyside Washington USA

8. Institute of Translational Health Sciences University of Washington Seattle Washington USA

9. Department of Health Systems and Population Health University of Washington Seattle Washington USA

10. Providence Medical Research Center Providence Health Care Spokane Washington USA

11. Department of Family Medicine University of Washington Seattle Washington USA

Abstract

AbstractPurposeNative Americans and Latinos have higher COVID‐19 infection and mortality rates and may have limited access to diagnostic testing. Home‐based testing may improve access to care in rural and underserved populations. This study tests the effect of community health worker (CHW) support on accessibility, feasibility, and completion of COVID‐19 home testing among Native American and Latino adults living on the Flathead Reservation in Montana and in Yakima Valley, Washington.MethodsA two‐arm, multisite, pragmatic randomized controlled trial was conducted using block randomization stratified by site and participant age. Active arm participants received CHW assistance with online COVID‐19 test kit registration and virtual swabbing support. The passive arm participants received standard‐of‐care support from the kit vendor. Logistic regression modeled the association between study arm and test completion (primary outcome) and between study arm and test completion with return of valid test results (secondary outcome). Responses to posttest surveys and interviews were summarized using deductive thematic analysis.FindingsOverall, 63% of participants (n = 268) completed COVID‐19 tests, and 50% completed tests yielding a valid result. Active arm participants had higher odds of test completion (odds ratio: 1.66, 95% confidence interval [1.01, 2.75]). Differences were most pronounced among adults ≥60 years. Participants cited ease of use and not having to leave home as positive aspects, and transportation and mailing issues as negative aspects of home‐based testing.ConclusionsCHW support led to higher COVID‐19 test completion rates, particularly among older adults. Significant testing barriers included language, educational level, rurality, and test kit issues.

Funder

National Institute of General Medical Sciences

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Wiley

Reference35 articles.

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4. MT Department of Health and Human Services.Demographic Information for COVID Cases Montana. Accessed September 9 2022.https://dphhs.mt.gov/assets/publichealth/CDEpi/DiseasesAtoZ/2019‐nCoV/EpiProfile/DemographicTables20220909.pdf

5. US Census.QuickFacts Montana. Accessed September 16 2022.https://www.census.gov/quickfacts/MT

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