An Evaluation of Follow-Up Activities of Participants From an Urban Prostate Cancer Screening Event

Author:

Drake Bettina F.1,Lewis-Thames Marquita W.1ORCID,Brown Ambriah2,Rancilio Danielle1,Hicks Veronica1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Surgery, Washington University in St. Louis School of Medicine, Division of Public Health Sciences, St. Louis, MO, USA

2. St. Louis Regional Health Commission, MO, USA

Abstract

This study aims to evaluate follow-up activities completed by participants attending community prostate cancer (PCa) screening events. On-site surveys were collected from participants of 17 free PCa screening events from 2007 to 2011 in the St. Louis, MO metropolitan area. Follow-up action surveys were mailed to all on-site participants to assess medical (i.e., made an appointment with a doctor, got additional testing for PCa, made an appointment to be screened) and nonmedical activities (i.e., sought social support, health information-seeking, health behavior modifications) completed after the PCa screening event. Further, t tests and chi-square tests characterized participant information from the on-site survey and within each follow-up activity category for the mailed surveys. Among 1,088 on-site community PCa screening participants, the mean age was 50 years old, 94% were Black, and 30% responded to the mailed follow-up action survey. For the recorded follow-up activities, 65% of participants reported medically reported activities, of which “made an appointment to get a yearly physical” was the most common action (29%). Health behavior modifications were the most common nonmedically related activities (44%). Health information-seeking behaviors were the least reported follow-up action (22%). Men with higher incomes, married, with health insurance, and a primary care physician, most often participated in post-PSA screening activities, namely medically-related and social support activities. Understanding the most common activities completed by participants of a community PCa screening suggests the effectiveness of community events to re-engage underserved populations in the health-care system and provides insight on acceptable health promotion opportunities.

Funder

National Cancer Institute

the Foundation for Barnes-Jewish Hospital and by Siteman Cancer Center

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Health(social science)

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