The feasibility and equity of text messaging to determine patient eligibility for lung cancer screening
Recommended Citation
Fridman I, Carter-Bawa L, Neslund-Dudas CM, and Elston Lafata J. The feasibility and equity of text messaging to determine patient eligibility for lung cancer screening. Am J Manag Care 2024; 30(9):440-444.
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
9-1-2024
Publication Title
The American journal of managed care
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Text messaging could be effective for determining patient eligibility for lung cancer screening (LCS). We explored people's willingness to share their tobacco use history via text message among diverse groups.
STUDY DESIGN: Cross-sectional survey.
METHODS: In 2020, we conducted a cross-sectional survey asking respondents about cellular phone usage, smoking habits, sociodemographic characteristics, and the likelihood of responding to a text message from their health care provider's office about tobacco use. We used χ² and analysis of variance tests for comparisons.
RESULTS: Among 745 respondents, 90% used text messaging casually. Overall, 54% never smoked, 33% currently smoked, and 13% previously smoked. Six percent were LCS eligible, and 20% used both cigarettes and e-cigarettes (dual users). Current smokers were significantly younger, less likely to be female, and more likely to use text messaging. LCS-eligible respondents were older and less likely to have a high income. Dual users were younger, less likely to report female gender and live in rural areas, and more likely to have a college education and high income. Most respondents (83%) indicated they were likely to respond to text message inquiries regarding smoking status. Middle-aged respondents (mean age, 37 years) were significantly more willing to report smoking status than younger or older respondents (91% vs 84% and 84%, respectively). Respondents with no college education (83% vs 88%) or with a low income vs a middle or high income (81% vs 86% and 88%, respectively) were significantly less willing to report smoking status via text messages.
CONCLUSIONS: Text messaging showed promise for evaluating smoking history and for simplifying the process of identifying LCS-eligible individuals. However, achieving equity in identifying eligibility for LCS requires the implementation of multimodal strategies.
Medical Subject Headings
Humans; Text Messaging; Male; Female; Lung Neoplasms; Cross-Sectional Studies; Middle Aged; Early Detection of Cancer; Aged; Adult; Feasibility Studies; Eligibility Determination; Socioeconomic Factors
PubMed ID
39302267
Volume
30
Issue
9
First Page
440
Last Page
444