Status
Conditions
Treatments
Study type
Funder types
Identifiers
About
Brief summery Prolonged presentation, along with diagnostic and treatment delays, remain significant problems for breast cancer care in Ethiopia, primarily due to low health-seeking behaviour, lack of access, long waiting times, and weak referral systems. Despite these challenges, evidence-based interventions like structured breast screening and patient navigation services are limited. To address these issues, the investigators aimed to implement a provider-initiated clinical breast examination and patient navigation intervention using an implementation mapping approach.
This is just a one-year implementation mapping (IM) study that will be carried out at four general hospitals in Ethiopia after identifying contextual barriers and implementation determinants using a baseline assessment. The main aim of the study is to improve timely diagnosis and initiation of breast cancer treatment by implementing provider-initiated clinical breast examination and patient navigation interventions.
The study has the following key outcomes: Proportion of CBE uptake, Time to diagnosis, Proportion of early-stage disease, Time to treatment initiation, Barriers and facilitators to implementation, Patient satisfaction, and perceived quality of care The study will strictly follow the steps of implementation mapping design to select and evaluate implementation strategies to bring an evidence-based intervention. In addition, the study will apply established frameworks such as the CFIR and RE-AIM, which can strengthen the study's ability to identify, measure, and interpret multiple implementation outcomes. This study aligns with the Ministry of Health priorities aimed at scaling up breast cancer early detection in general hospitals, which are potential sites for expanding and decentralizing peripheral cancer care in Ethiopia. Therefore, it will provide evidence-based strategies that can be incorporated into the routine health care practice to address multiple points of delay in the care pathway, mainly in the early detection and referral phases at each level of the health care system in the country. The findings will offer a promising strategy to address critical delays in the breast cancer care continuum for low-income settings facing similar challenges. Moreover, the findings will contribute to national and global efforts to improve breast cancer care equity and outcomes through implementation science.
Full description
The majority of breast cancer patients experienced long delays from their initial presentation to final diagnosis and treatment initiation in Ethiopia, primarily due to low health-seeking behavior, lack of access, long waiting times for diagnostic workups, and weak referral systems. Despite these challenges, evidence-based interventions like structured breast screening using clinical breast exams and PN services are limited. CBE is offered only for those presenting with breast complaints. Standard screening tools such as mammography are very limited in the country. This urges an urgent need for context-specific implementation strategies that are evidence-based and feasible within the constraints of the health care facilities in Ethiopia, where patients suffer long diagnostic and treatment delays.
The investigators hypothesized that implementing provider-initiated (CBE) and PN would improve the screening uptake, timely diagnosis, and linkage to treatment for breast cancer at general hospitals in Ethiopia. The intervention will be implemented based on the recently launched national breast health guideline, which recommends using CBE and PN services with effective referral pathways. This combined approach aligns with the WHO's GBCI, aiming to reduce mortality through early detection and comprehensive care, and is particularly suited to Ethiopia.
The investigators aimed to use the Implementation Mapping framework, a systematic, step-by-step methodology used to guide the development of implementation strategies that enhance the adoption, execution, and sustainability of evidence-based interventions by engaging stakeholders within local settings. This study will address a critical gap in breast cancer care in Ethiopia by facilitating early detection, timely diagnosis, and care. Moreover, the findings will generate practical insights and scalable approaches that can inform policymakers and be expanded nationally by integrating them into the conventional healthcare system and tailoring them for other low-resource settings facing comparable issues.
Implementation process Our implementation will follow the following five steps of implementation mapping design Step 1: Conduct a needs assessment The first step is conducting a thorough assessment using the CFIR framework to gather general information on the health care infrastructure and workforce, opportunities, and challenges from the perspectives of stakeholders by conducting initial health facility surveys, IDIs, and FGDs.
Step 2: Identify adoption and implementation outcomes, performance objectives, performance determinants, and change objectives In this step, the investigators will identify the potential adoption and implementation outcomes, performance objectives, performance determinants, and change objectives based on our formative assessment findings Step 3: Select and Design Implementation Strategies
In the third step, the investigators identified the following key implementation strategies that address the specific needs of receivers and implementers within the local context:
Step 4: Produce Implementation Protocols and Materials. In this step, a set of necessary protocols & materials will be developed. This includes health education materials (audio visuals, posters, brochures), follow-up data collection tools, registration log books, screening tickets, HCP training manuals, CBE and PN SOPs, consent forms, patient navigation tracking forms, referral logbooks, post-intervention assessment tools, observation checklists, monitoring and evaluation tools.
Step 5: Evaluation of implementation outcomes In this step, a RE-AIM framework will be used to evaluate the impact of the intervention on improving each of the adoption and implementation outcomes. Surveys and interviews will be conducted with HCPs and patients to understand their perceptions and experiences with the intervention using each domain of the RE-AIM framework.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Women screened for breast cancer in the past year
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
2,000 participants in 1 patient group
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal