Frontiers in Oncology (May 2018)

A Step Toward Timely Referral and Early Diagnosis of Cancer: Implementation and Impact on Knowledge of a Primary Care-Based Training Program in Botswana

  • Neo M. Tapela,
  • Neo M. Tapela,
  • Michael J. Peluso,
  • Michael J. Peluso,
  • Racquel E. Kohler,
  • Irene I. Setlhako,
  • Kerapetse Botebele,
  • Kemiso Gabegwe,
  • Isaac Nkele,
  • Mohan Narasimhamurthy,
  • Mompati Mmalane,
  • Surbhi Grover,
  • Surbhi Grover,
  • Tomer Barak,
  • Tomer Barak,
  • Lawrence N. Shulman,
  • Shahin Lockman,
  • Shahin Lockman,
  • Shahin Lockman,
  • Scott Dryden-Peterson,
  • Scott Dryden-Peterson,
  • Scott Dryden-Peterson

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2018.00187
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8

Abstract

Read online

IntroductionHealth system delays in diagnosis of cancer contribute to the glaring disparities in cancer mortality between high-income countries and low- and middle-income countries. In Botswana, approximately 70% of cancers are diagnosed at late stage and median time from first health facility visit for cancer-related symptoms to specialty cancer care was 160 days (IQR 59–653). We describe the implementation and early outcomes of training targeting primary care providers, which is a part of a multi-component implementation study in Kweneng-East district aiming to enhance timely diagnosis of cancers.MethodsHealth-care providers from all public facilities within the district were invited to participate in an 8-h intensive short-course program developed by a multidisciplinary team and adapted to the Botswana health system context. Participants’ performance was assessed using a 25-multiple choice question tool, with pre- and post-assessments paired by anonymous identifier. Statistical analysis with Wilcoxon signed-rank test to compare performance at the two time points across eight sub-domains (pathophysiology, epidemiology, social context, symptoms, evaluation, treatment, documentation, follow-up). Linear regression and negative binomial modeling were used to determine change in performance. Participants’ satisfaction with the program was measured on a separate survey using a 5-point Likert scale.Results176 participants attended the training over 5 days in April 2016. Pooled linear regression controlling for test version showed an overall performance increase of 16.8% after participation (95% CI 15.2–18.4). Statistically significant improvement was observed for seven out of eight subdomains on test A and all eight subdomains on test B. Overall, 71 (40.3%) trainees achieved a score greater than 70% on the pretest, and 161 (91.5%) did so on the posttest. Participants reported a high degree of satisfaction with the training program’s content and its relevance to their daily work.ConclusionWe describe a successfully implemented primary health care provider-focused training component of an innovative intervention aiming to reduce health systems delays in cancer diagnosis in sub-Saharan Africa. The training achieved district-wide participation, and improvement in the knowledge of primary health-care providers in this setting.Clinical Trial Registrationwww.ClinicalTrials.gov, identifier NCT02752061.

Keywords