Background: Colorectal Cancer (CRC) is often preventable through regular screening. CRC screening is an evidence-based intervention for early detection and prevention of CRC. However, screening rates are low among medically underserved, minority populations. In collaboration with a local safety-net healthcare system and community clinics, we are implementing a comprehensive, multi-modal CRC prevention program. Our CRC screening program includes community outreach, culturally and linguistically targeted educational point-of-care patient education videos, patient navigation services, and provider and staff training. In 2018, a new component was introduced that includes a CRC survivor led provider-targeted assessment intervention leveraging the American Cancer Society National Colorectal Roundtable’s “80% in Every Community” campaign. Methods: As part of the 80% in Every Community campaign, providers and clinical staff are trained by the CRC survivor staff member to employ strategies from the Roundtable’s toolkit to heighten clinic-level commitment to improving screening rates. Specific strategies include providing tips for evidence-based messaging to reach the unscreened, and training providers to consistently give a strong CRC screening recommendation. A baseline survey was administered ahead of the initial training to assess current clinical practices. Results: Survey data indicated 84.3% (N= 297, 14 clinics) of respondents identified patients not completing and returning FIT as a screening barrier (61.7%-Sometimes and 22.7%-Usually). When asked if they had mechanism to ensure patients given a FIT kit have completed and returned them -75.7 % said Yes and 24.3%-No. In the follow-up question, asking if they had a mechanism to ensure FIT were completed and returned, responses showed: 13.9 % said no mechanism, 43.0% reminder call, 8.1% mail reminder, and 28.6% said a chart reminder to return kit at next visit. 73 respondents wrote in various other mechanisms. Discussion: Respondents believed a systematic mechanism already existed to remind patients to complete their FIT and return it to their clinic. Our next steps are to present these findings to health system leadership and investigate the possibility to strengthen screening patient reminders in various forms of communication to increase FIT completion rate.

Citation Format: Allison Rosen, Roshanda Chenier, Jane Montealegre, Maria Jibaja-Weiss. A colorectal cancer screening intervention to help increase screening rate within the Harris Health safety-net health care system [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the AACR Virtual Conference: Thirteenth AACR Conference on the Science of Cancer Health Disparities in Racial/Ethnic Minorities and the Medically Underserved; 2020 Oct 2-4. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev 2020;29(12 Suppl):Abstract nr PO-255.