The Access Cancer Care India (ACCI) project is aimed at designing and evaluating an evidence-based multi-level strategy tailored to the local health system to enhance access to early detection and care continuum for oral, breast, and cervical cancers among rural populations in India, who are socioeconomically disadvantaged and vulnerable to huge inequity in cancer care.
Pre-intervention phase:
The pre-intervention assessment was conducted in four blocks (Vanur, Mailam, Vikravandi, Kanai) in Viluppuram District, Tamil Nadu, between August 2023 and July 2024 to understand the barriers and challenges rural men and women face in accessing cancer early detection care continuum using various methods.
- Questionnaire survey of breast, cervical, and oral cancer patients and the general population
- Focus group discussions with the general population and community health workers
- In-depth interviews with key informants
- Capacity assessment The results of the preintervention highlighted that fear, stigma, limited accessibility to screening, miscommunication and lack of family support were vital barriers that influenced cancer care access in Tamil Nadu. Thus, we decided to design and implement evidence based cultural relevant intervention, pilot test and evaluate them. In order to target the component of fear, stigma and accessibility issues, we decided to design and implement a Lived life communication campaign and test it as an RCT across selected blocks of Tamil Nadu. The rationale for proposing a parallel-arm RCT for this intervention is to assess its effectiveness specifically within the Indian context. While the "lived experience" campaign has been successfully implemented in other Asian populations, its impact in India remains untested. A parallel-arm RCT design enables comparison across the intervention and control arm on specific screening program outcomes. This approach ensures a comprehensive assessment of the intervention's effectiveness in improving screening uptake among the target population. The findings will provide robust evidence to either validate or improve the intervention, tailoring it to the unique needs of the Indian setting. This study evaluates the effectiveness of the Lived Experience Communication Campaign (LECC) in increasing participation in cancer screening programs for oral, breast, and cervical cancer among rural populations in Villupuram district, Tamil Nadu. Conducted as a parallel-arm, open-label, randomized controlled trial (RCT), the study compares LECC to standard awareness campaigns. Randomisation was at the level of the block using cointoss, where Mailam block serves as the intervention site, while Vanur block serves as the control. Eligible participants (men and women aged 30-59 years without prior cancer diagnoses or recent screenings) will be randomly selected using systematic sampling. The intervention comprises a culturally relevant two-minute awareness video featuring personal survivor narratives, delivered door-to-door by community health workers. Standard awareness campaigns are conducted in the control arm. Baseline data on cancer screening participation is collected from healthcare records. Follow-up assessments are conducted monthly for six months, measuring screening participation rates and other program indicators. Evaluation follows the RE-AIM framework, examining effectiveness, feasibility, and acceptability. Results will inform future policy decisions on implementing lived experience campaigns to enhance cancer screening uptake in India.