FIT kit

Tips for Improving Health Screenings

Submitted by Laureen Lazarovici on Thu, 03/22/2018 - 14:13
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LSR-1658
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Tips on how to help our members and patients prevent illness and disease with preventive screenings. This is one of the things that sets Kaiser Permanente apart from our competitors. 

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Laureen Lazarovici
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Download the Tip Sheet

Want a colorful tip sheet with these ideas to hand out and post on bulletin boards? Download one here!

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Tips for Improving Health Screenings
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Identifying health risks is essential to Kaiser Permanente's mission
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Screenings for such diseases as colorectal and breast cancers, high blood pressure, diabetes and obesity help us proactively identify identifying health risks and early signs of disease Here are some ways everyone can help ensure our members stay as healthy as possible.

  1. During a visit, print out and review with the patient any screening gaps that are identified on his or her Proactive Office Visit summary.
  2. Use KP HealthConnect™ and/or panel management tools to identify and reach out to members who are due for a screening to check for high blood pressure or such diseases as colorectal or breast cancer.
  3. Have receptionists keep an eye out for age- and risk-appropriate members during office visits and target them for follow up by care providers.
  4. Create outreach scripting that personalizes the importance of preventive screenings.
  5. Designate a staff member to contact members who received at-home fecal immunochemical tests (known as FIT kits), to remind them to return them.
  6. Capture patients’ attention by posting or mailing brightly colored literature that explains how a test detects early signs of disease and can be life-saving.
  7. Work with your local radiology department to identify the best days and times for same-day mammograms, so patients can get the scan without an appointment.
  8. Contact hypertensive patients at pharmacy pick-up counters for blood pressure checks and consultations.
  9. Have clinical assistants and/or medical assistants increase the number of outreach calls and blood pressure checks.
  10. Invite a regional or local expert in prevention and screening to meet with your team to discuss how best to support regional and local initiatives without duplicating efforts.

 

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Telling a Story Helps With Early Cancer Detection tyra.l.ferlatte Mon, 02/04/2013 - 17:34
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Telling a Story Helps With Early Cancer Detection
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Internal medicine UBT's personal touch inspires patients to return cancer-screening kits
Region

When the North Lancaster Primary Care Team B unit-based team decided to work on improving colorectal screening rates, they adapted one from their colleagues at the West Salem Medical Office.

This two-pronged approach included both an outreach system and a plan to ensure team members were delivering a consistent message.

“Our patients are not a number or a statistic, they are a person, and they are looking for us to take care of them,” says department administrator, Primary Care, Phillip Taylor, who was the team’s co-lead at the time the project was underway.

So, team members made it personal.

They told the story of how physicians in the clinic had tested positive, but because the disease was detected early, they got treatment in time and are doing well.

In addition, the team identified its eligible patients between the ages of 50 and 75. When one of those patients came into the clinic, the medical assistant would talk about the importance of the test, give them a FIT kit to take home and return in the mail. When physicians saw patients, they would reiterate the need to do the test.

Nurses also played a role.

They would track the distribution of the kits and follow up with the patient if the kit had not been returned. When they spoke to patients, they would mention the physician was looking for the kit and the importance of returning it.

The combination of methods worked better than hoped—the team shot past its target by nearly seven percentage points.

“We’re looking for early detection,” says labor co-lead and medical assistant, Bill Waters, SEIU Local 49. “Colorectal cancer can hit anybody, and we explain how it’s impacted our own providers at our clinic. We add a personal touch by telling our story, and people respond.”

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Bill Waters, an MA and a member of SEIU Local 49, is the team's labor co-lead.
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pdsa_colorectal fit kits_nw_jg3_tf2.docx
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Adding a personal story about the importance of returning a FIT kit helped this team in the Northwest shoot past its goal for improving the rate of return for the cancer-screening test.

Communicator (reporters)
Jennifer Gladwell
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
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