Development and pilot testing of a clinic implementation program delivering physical activity electronic referrals to cancer survivors

Author:

Faro Jamie M1ORCID,Yue Kai-Lou1,Leach Heather J2,Crisafio Mary E2,Lemon Stephenie C1,Wang Bo1,McManus David D3ORCID,Sadasivam Rajani S1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Population and Quantitative Health Sciences, University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School , Worcester, MA , USA

2. Department of Health and Exercise Science, Colorado State University , Fort Collins, CO , USA

3. Department of Medicine, Division of Cardiology, University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School , Worcester, MA , USA

Abstract

Abstract Provider physical activity referrals are recommended for cancer survivors, though barriers exist to clinical system integration. To develop and test ActivityChoice, an electronic referral (eReferral) clinic implementation program referring cancer survivors to physical activity programs of their choice. In Phase 1, we conducted semi-structured interviews with Cancer Center clinicians (n = 4) and cancer-focused physical activity program leaders (n = 3) assessing adaptations needed to implement an eReferral previously designed for another context. In Phase 2, we pilot-tested clinician-delivered referrals to survivors in two 12-week Plan, Do, Study, Act (PDSA) cycles. We examined feasibility using descriptive statistics (clinicians’ adoption and engagement, patient referrals, and physical activity program enrollment) and acceptability through semi-structured interviews with enrolled clinicians (n = 4) and referred patients (n = 9). ActivityChoice included a secure referral webform, text message/email referral confirmations, clinician training/booster sessions, visual reminders, and referrals to in-person or virtual group physical activity programs. Results for each PDSA cycle respectively included: 41% (n = 7) and 53% (n = 8) of clinicians adopted ActivityChoice; 18 and 36 patients were referred; 39% (n = 7) and 33% (n = 12) of patients enrolled in programs, and 30% (n = 4) and 14% (n = 5) of patients deferred enrollment. Patients and clinicians appreciated the referrals and choices. A printed handout describing both programs was added to the clinic workflow for Cycle 2, which yielded more referrals, but lower program enrollment rates. Clinic-based eReferrals to choices of physical activity programs were feasible and acceptable by clinicians and patients. Added clinic workflow support may facilitate referrals.

Funder

National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Behavioral Neuroscience,Applied Psychology

Reference46 articles.

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