The vision of our proposal to continue as a center of excellence in cancer communication research is to reduce the burden of cancer for those who suffer unnecessarily for lack of support or information. Our center (a partnership between the Universities of Wisconsin and North Carolina, the National Black Leadership Initiative on Cancer - Midwest, Kaiser Permanente Northwest, and M D Anderson) will include three randomized control trials (Effectiveness, Prolonging Life and Survivorship) and a set of development projects intended to affect Reach: We will: (a) serve low literacy populations with audio and video rather than text, (b) expand ranges of patients served from pre-diagnosis through dignified death or optimal survival, and (c) move ICCS research into colon cancer and activity enhancement. Efficacy and Effectiveness: We will (a) test whether CHESS has the same results in the """"""""effectiveness"""""""" context as found in the efficacy context, (b) improve outcomes by testing the efficacy of small devices rather than laptop computers and by enhancing CHESS collaborative nature by using wikis and other co-creation technologies, and (c) further understanding of communication science via Self Determination Theory, and examine the impact of ICCS beyond psychosocial outcomes to new behavioral and clinical outcomes. Adoption, Implementation and Maintenance: We will (a) examine acceptance and feasibility of using ICCS in a large HMO, test the representativeness of the adopters of ICCS and the extent to which implementation follows intent, and (b) gather data on how the ICCS can be fully integrated into the organization to build the business and clinical cases for adoption. The projects will translate research into real world applications, advance the technology of ICCS and knowledge of outcomes and mechanisms of effect;it will also enhance the theory base around which such systems can be developed and tested. This proposal responds to the National Cancer Institute's call for systems that improve personalized patient and family support, address survivorship needs, have real world dissemination, enable efficient healthcare utilization, and improve QOL across the cancer continuum.

Public Health Relevance

This center grant focuses on CHESS, a computer program designed to provide support and information to cancer patients and families. It describes three large research projects: 1) Effectiveness will demonstrate how CHESS works in a real world health care setting by yielding new data on women's use of CHESS, whether CHESS helps women feel better informed and less anxious, and whether CHESS reduces health care costs;2) Prolonging Life will validate an earlier test finding that CHESS helped lung cancer patients live longer;and 3) Survivorship will make CHESS accessible anywhere through cell phones and will test whether CHESS can prevent the return of colon cancer by helping people lead more active lives.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Type
Specialized Center (P50)
Project #
3P50CA095817-09S1
Application #
8244663
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZCA1-SRRB-U (O1))
Program Officer
Ogunbiyi, Peter
Project Start
2002-03-01
Project End
Budget Start
2011-09-01
Budget End
2012-08-31
Support Year
9
Fiscal Year
2011
Total Cost
$56,361
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Wisconsin Madison
Department
Engineering (All Types)
Type
Schools of Engineering
DUNS #
161202122
City
Madison
State
WI
Country
United States
Zip Code
53715
Mayer, Deborah K; Landucci, Gina; Awoyinka, Lola et al. (2018) SurvivorCHESS to increase physical activity in colon cancer survivors: can we get them moving? J Cancer Surviv 12:82-94
Han, Jeong Yeob; Hawkins, Robert; Baker, Timothy et al. (2017) How Cancer Patients Use and Benefit from an Interactive Cancer Communication System. J Health Commun 22:792-799
Gustafson, David H; DuBenske, Lori L; Atwood, Amy K et al. (2017) Reducing Symptom Distress in Patients With Advanced Cancer Using an e-Alert System for Caregivers: Pooled Analysis of Two Randomized Clinical Trials. J Med Internet Res 19:e354
Singh, Sarguni; Cortez, Dagoberto; Maynard, Douglas et al. (2017) Characterizing the Nature of Scan Results Discussions: Insights Into Why Patients Misunderstand Their Prognosis. J Oncol Pract 13:e231-e239
Kim, Eunkyung; Scheufele, Dietram A; Han, Jeong Yeob et al. (2017) Opinion Leaders in Online Cancer Support Groups: An Investigation of Their Antecedents and Consequences. Health Commun 32:142-151
Namkoong, Kang; Shah, Dhavan V; Gustafson, David H (2017) Offline Social Relationships and Online Cancer Communication: Effects of Social and Family Support on Online Social Network Building. Health Commun 32:1422-1429
Namkoong, Kang; Shah, Dhavan V; McLaughlin, Bryan et al. (2017) Expression and Reception: An Analytic Method for Assessing Message Production and Consumption in CMC. Commun Methods Meas 11:153-172
Kim, Sojung Claire; Shaw, Bret R; Shah, Dhavan V et al. (2017) Interactivity, Presence, and Targeted Patient Care: Mapping e-Health Intervention Effects Over Time for Cancer Patients with Depression. Health Commun :1-10
Li, Charles; Yan, Xianghe; Lillehoj, Hyun S (2017) Complete genome sequences of Clostridium perfringens Del1 strain isolated from chickens affected by necrotic enteritis. Gut Pathog 9:69
Maynard, Douglas W; Cortez, Dagoberto; Campbell, Toby C (2016) 'End of life' conversations, appreciation sequences, and the interaction order in cancer clinics. Patient Educ Couns 99:92-100

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