Leveraging public health cancer surveillance capacity to develop and support a rural cancer network

Author:

Semprini Jason1ORCID,Lizarraga Ingrid M.2,Seaman Aaron T.3,Johnson Erin C.4,Wahlen Madison M.1,Gorzelitz Jessica S.5,Birken Sarah A.6,Schroeder Mary C.78,Paulus Tarah2,Charlton Mary E.12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Epidemiology University of Iowa College of Public Health Iowa City Iowa USA

2. Department of Surgery University of Iowa Carver College of Medicine Iowa City Iowa USA

3. Department of Internal Medicine University of Iowa Carver College of Medicine Iowa City Iowa USA

4. University of Iowa Tippie College of Business Iowa City Iowa USA

5. Department of Health and Human Physiology University of Iowa College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Iowa City Iowa USA

6. Department of Implementation Science Wake Forest University School of Medicine Iowa City Iowa USA

7. Department of Pharmacy Practice and Science University of Iowa College of Pharmacy Iowa City Iowa USA

8. University of Iowa College of Public Health, Iowa Cancer Registry Iowa City Iowa USA

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionAs the rural–urban cancer mortality gap widens, centering care around the needs of rural patients presents an opportunity to advance equity. One barrier to delivering patient‐centered care at rural hospitals stems from limited analytic capacity to leverage data and monitor patient outcomes. This case study describes the experience of a public health cancer surveillance system aiming to fill this gap within the context of a rural cancer network.MethodsTo support the implementation of a novel network model intervention in Iowa, the Iowa Cancer Registry began generating hospital‐specific and catchment area reports. Then, the Iowa Cancer Registry supported adapting the network model to fit the context of Iowa's cancer care delivery system by performing data monitoring and reporting functions. Informed by a gap analysis, the Iowa Cancer Registry then identified which quality accreditation standards could be achieved with public health surveillance data and analytic support.ResultsThe network intervention in Iowa supported 5 rural cancer centers across the state, each concurrently pursuing quality accreditation standards. The Iowa Cancer Registry's hospital and catchment‐specific reports illuminated the cancer burden and needs of rural cancer centers within the network. Our team identified 19 (of the 36 total) quality standards that can be supported by public health surveillance functions typically performed by the registry. These standards encompassed data‐driven quality improvement, patient monitoring, and reporting guideline‐concordant care standards.ConclusionsAs rural hospitals continue to face resource constraints, multisectoral efforts informed by data from centralized public health surveillance systems can promote quality improvement initiatives across rural communities. While our work remains preliminary, we predict that analytic support provided by the Iowa Cancer Registry will enable the rural network hospitals to focus their capacity toward developing the infrastructure necessary to deliver high‐quality care and serve the unique needs of rural cancer patients.

Funder

Division of Cancer Prevention, National Cancer Institute

Publisher

Wiley

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