Rationale and Design of the Lung Cancer Screening Implementation. Evaluation of Patient-Centered Care Study.

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Miranda, Leah S

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Datta, Santanu

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Melzer, Anne C

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Wiener, Renda Soylemez

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Davis, James M

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Tong, Betty C

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Golden, Sara E

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Slatore, Christopher G

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2020-09-01T13:46:42Z

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2020-09-01T13:46:42Z

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2017-10

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2020-09-01T13:46:42Z

dc.description.abstract

Screening for lung cancer using low-dose computed tomography has been demonstrated to reduce lung cancer-related mortality and is being widely implemented. Further research in this area is needed to assess the impact of screening on patient-centered outcomes. Here, we describe the design and rationale for a new study entitled Lung Cancer Screening Implementation: Evaluation of Patient-Centered Care. The protocol is composed of an interconnected series of studies evaluating patients and clinicians who are engaged in lung cancer screening in real-world settings. The primary goal of this study is to evaluate communication processes that are being used in routine care and to identify best practices that can be readily scaled up for implementation in multiple settings. We hypothesize that higher overall quality of patient-clinician communication processes will be associated with lower levels of distress and decisional conflict as patients decide whether or not to participate in lung cancer screening. This work is a critical step toward identifying modifiable mechanisms that are associated with high quality of care for the millions of patients who will consider lung cancer screening. Given the enormous potential benefits and burdens of lung cancer screening on patients, clinicians, and the healthcare system, it is important to identify and then scale up quality communication practices that positively influence patient-centered care.

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2329-6933

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2325-6621

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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/21397

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eng

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American Thoracic Society

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Annals of the American Thoracic Society

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10.1513/annalsats.201705-378sd

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Humans

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Lung Neoplasms

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Tomography, X-Ray Computed

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Communication

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Decision Making

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Research Design

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Aged

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Middle Aged

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Patient-Centered Care

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Female

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Male

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Early Detection of Cancer

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Rationale and Design of the Lung Cancer Screening Implementation. Evaluation of Patient-Centered Care Study.

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Journal article

duke.contributor.orcid

Davis, James M|0000-0002-7196-5649

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Tong, Betty C|0000-0002-3345-3124

pubs.begin-page

1581

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1590

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10

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Faculty

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Duke

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School of Medicine

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Duke Cancer Institute

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Medicine, General Internal Medicine

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Institutes and Centers

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Medicine

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Clinical Science Departments

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Published

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14

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