Despite the overall decline in cervical cancer, there is a large disparity between disease-related incidence and mortality rates for African Americans (AA) and Latinas compared to Caucasians. Adherence to diagnostic colposcopy and follow-up regimens is crucial after an abnormal Pap smear result indicative of oncogenic HPV (approximately 75 percent of abnormalities), since early detection and medical management can prevent invasive cervical cancer. However, rates of adherence to initial diagnostic colposcopy and subsequent medical recommendations remain low among low-income minority populations. Hence, there is a need to develop and evaluate the efficacy of culturally- sensitive, transportable health communication protocols to facilitate adherence over time. Guided by the Cognitive-Social Health Information Processing (C-SHIP) model, this randomized controlled trial aims to conduct a head-to-head comparison of a tailored counseling intervention protocol, delivered through either telephone or mail-home print, designed to assess and address cognitive- affective barriers to adherence among low-income AAs and Latinas prior to the initial diagnostic colposcopy appointment. Patients (N=730) will receive a barriers assessment and will be randomly assigned to: 1) standard care (SC; notification letter plus telephone appointment confirmation); 2) telephone barriers counseling (CAB-T; SC plus tailored Cognitive-Affective Barriers Counseling delivered by phone); or 3) print barriers counseling (CAB-P; SC plus tailored Cognitive-Affective Barriers Print materials delivered via mail). Additional aims are to explore the cognitive-affective mediators of intervention impact and the moderating role of attentional style on the individual's cognitive-affective processing profile. Outcome measures will assess adherence to initial colposcopy and to follow-up management recommendations over the 15-month cervical surveillance cycle, cognitive-affective processes (risk-related knowledge/perceptions, fatalism, motivation to adhere, intrusive/avoidant ideation, health-related planning) and intervention cost-effectiveness. Psychosocial assessments will be conducted by telephone at baseline (2-4 weeks pre-colposcopy), and at 1-week, 9-months, and 15-months post-index colposcopy. A dissemination plan will be developed from study outcomes data, the cost-effectiveness analysis, patient intervention evaluations, and input from a Community Advisory Committee and on-site staff. The study brings together two key strengths, expertise in: 1) cervical cancer risk assessment; and 2) the design and analysis of transportable tailored counseling protocols targeted to underserved at-risk groups. Findings are relevant not only to the management of precancerous cervical disease, but will also lay the groundwork for counseling protocols that can be readily disseminated into routine care to increase adherence to medical regimens, with a view to ultimately reducing the disparity in disease rates among underserved populations.
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