Pragmatic Trial - Telehealth Research and Innovation for Veterans with Cancer (THRIVE).
New York University School Of Medicine, New York NY
Investigators
Linked publications, trials & patents
Abstract
Four cancers â lung, colorectal, prostate and breast â account for nearly half of all cancer deaths among men and women in the United States. Many factors (e.g., rurality, race/ethnicity and poverty), individually and in additive or synergistic combinations play an important role in access to and outcomes from cancer care, often accounting for the observed cancer care differences. Veterans Health Administration (VA) is the largest integrated provider of cancer care in the US and provides state of the art cancer care to millions of veterans. Yet even within VA, routinely praised for its equal access to care model, differences in cancer care persist. However, while VA serves a complex, high risk population, it also leverages the advantages of an integrated national single-payer system, such as care coordination and telehealth, to improve the quality of care. Widespread use of telehealth in oncology creates both challenges and opportunities to expand access and improve care. In some cases, however, reliance on telehealth may widen the âdigital divideâ for those with limited ability to access it. A major knowledge gap exists regarding the optimal way to integrate telehealth into oncology practice across the care continuum. Our overarching aim is to improve the quality of cancer care across the United States by leveraging lessons learned applying telehealth treating veterans with cancer in VAâs integrated health care system. The objective of the pragmatic trial to test the effectiveness of an existing, ongoing clinical service, the VA National TeleOncology program (NTO), a multilevel telehealth population health management program. We propose a stepped wedge, cluster randomized, hybrid effectiveness-implementation study of NTO among veterans diagnosed with prostate, lung, colon and breast cancers in VA. We will employ mixed methods to explore the association between NTO and 1) service delivery outcomes, 2) hierarchical cancer outcomes, and 3) implementation outcomes. Specifically, the aims of the pragmatic trial are to: (1) Evaluate the effect of a comprehensive multilevel virtual oncology program to promote telehealth engagement on stakeholder (patient, provider, administrator) cancer care experience; (2) Evaluate the effect of a comprehensive, multilevel virtual oncology program on quality of cancer care in veterans diagnosed with lung, colorectal, prostate and breast cancer; and (3) Determine the impact and cost of a comprehensive multilevel teleoncology program. Our proposed hybrid effectiveness implementation trial to evaluate a comprehensive virtual oncology program to promote telehealth engagement has high potential for scalability and public health impact both within and outside of VA.
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