Patient navigation programs in Alberta, Canada: an environmental scan.

CMAJ Open

Department of Medicine (Tang); Department of Community Health Sciences (Tang, Sharma); O' Brien Institute for Public Health (Tang, Ghali); W21C Research and Innovation Centre, Cumming School of Medicine (Kelly, Sharma); Office of the Vice-President (Research) (Ghali), University of Calgary, Calgary, Alta.

Published: November 2021

Background: Patient navigation is a complex intervention that has garnered substantial interest and investment across Canada. We conducted an environmental scan to understand the landscape of patient navigation programs within the health care system in Alberta, Canada.

Methods: We included patient navigation programs within Alberta Health Services (AHS) and Alberta's Primary Care Networks (PCNs). Key informants were asked in October 2016 to identify existing programs and their corresponding program contacts. These program contacts were invited to complete a telephone-based survey from October 2016 to July 2017, to provide program descriptions and eligibility criteria, and to identify gaps in navigation. Programs were included if they engaged patients on an individual basis, and either facilitated continuity of care or promoted patient and family empowerment. We tabulated results and calculated summary statistics for program characteristics.

Results: Ninety-five potentially eligible programs were identified by key informants. The response rate to the study survey was 73% ( = 69). After excluding programs not meeting inclusion criteria, we included a total of 58 programs in the study: 43 AHS programs and 15 PCN programs. Nearly all programs (93%, = 54) delivered navigation via an individual acting as a navigator. A minority of programs also included nonnavigator components, such as Web-based resources (7%, = 4) and process or structural changes to facilitate navigation (22%, = 13). Certain patient subgroups were particularly well-served by patient navigation; these included patients with cancer, substance use disorders or mental health concerns, and pediatric patients. Gaps identified in navigation fell under 4 domains: awareness, resources, geographic distribution and integration.

Interpretation: Patient navigation programs are common and have extended beyond cancer care, from which the construct originated; however, gaps include a lack of awareness and inequitable access to the programs. These findings will be of interest to those developing and implementing patient navigation interventions in Alberta and other jurisdictions.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8428899PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.9778/cmajo.20210004DOI Listing

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