"A Tool to Improve Evaluation of Patient Navigation Services in Under-served Populations" - Native American Cancer Initiatives, Inc. (NACI) is a woman-owned, minority (American Indian) business with
fewer than three full-time-equivalent employees. This for-profit company, founded in 1998, has the mission to
provide technical assistance and products to communities, patients, researchers, academicians, universities,
research institutions, and professionals on Native Americans, cultural issues, program development and
assessment, evaluation and cancer care across the continuum (prevention through end-of-life care). The
purpose of this project is to develop and evaluate a fully functioning tablet app focused on the Survivorship
phase of the cancer care continuum that will allow PNs to easily document activities and interactions.
Data collected through implementation of the proposed app can subsequently be used to document, track
and evaluate the effectiveness of PN activities, interactions and outcomes and their impact on access to timely,
efficient and equitable health care services, leading to more rigorous evidence-based programs. A portable
application would allow PNs to document their activities with patients in real time and also allow their
supervisors and program administrators to assess the impact of these activities. This Phase I study addresses
the research question, “Can an existing online patient navigation documentation and evaluation program be
modified to create an easy to use tablet app that can track a PN's activities with cancer survivors, function in
multiple settings, and produce data that can be used for COC and other appropriate navigation accreditation?”
The Specific Aims are:
1. Gather input from an Expert Advisory Panel, a Patient Navigator Advisory Committee, ten key informant
interviews and a focus group to provide input needed to adapt survivorship components of NACR's existing
online patient navigation documentation and evaluation program for development of a tablet app prototype.
2. Conduct 3 usability tests to determine ease-of-use, comprehensiveness, effectiveness, and usefulness of
the fully functioning tablet app for patient navigation documentation and evaluation.
3. Based upon Expert Advisory Panel consensus and Patient Navigator Advisory Committee guidance,
determine the feasibility of the tablet app for expansion in Phase II.
The outcome for Phase I will be the feasibility assessment of a prototype tablet app that (a) makes data input
easier and more accurate, ensuring systematic data collection; (b) allows for real-time summaries specific to
individual patients; (c) allows program administrators to monitor PN interactions and produce a summary of
activities documenting PN value; (d) documents activities for billing; and (e) collects patient perspectives on
navigation services. The proposed project has the potential to improve patient navigation documentation and
program evaluation activities to enhance accountability and evidence of success that can influence health care
policies and reduce health inequities.