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Community Oncology and Prevention Trials

Supportive Care / Symptom Management (Prevention of Cancer Morbidity)

Projects and Investigators

On Our Own Terms: A Lay Health Advisor Pilot Study

Principal Investigator:Hanson, Laura C
Institution:University of North Carolina Chapel Hill
State:NC
Research Category:Projects Funded Under RFA 05-013: Reducing Barriers to the Delivery of Symptom Management and Palliative Care

NCI Program Director:O'Mara, Ann
NCI Division:Division of Cancer Prevention
Project ID:R21, NR009785
Project Funding Period:9/12/05 to 8/31/07

Program Description:

The proposed pilot study will design and test the feasibility of a Lay Health Advisor intervention with the overall objective of improving treatment for pain and suffering for African American patients with cancer. To achieve this objective, we will utilize a successful research partnership between the UNC-CH School of Medicine and Shaw University, a historically black university. An interdisciplinary group of faculty with expertise in palliative care and in community-based research will recruit 30 Palliative Care Lay Health Advisors (PCLHA) from 6 African American churches. PCLHA will receive training in 3 content areas - palliative care, spiritual care giving, and lay health advisor skills. CLHA will then be paired with 60 African American cancer patients to provide counseling about pain and symptom management, local palliative care resources and spiritual care. Specific aims of this proposal are: 1. To explore the acceptability and comprehensiveness of an existing measure of quality of life at the end of life (QUAL-E) in focus groups of African-American cancer patients and family caregivers, 2. To test the feasibility of proposed methods for recruiting and training Palliative Care Lay Health Advisors from African-American churches, 3. To test the feasibility of proposed methods for pairing Palliative Care Lay Health Advisors with African-American patients with pain and suffering from cancer, and 4. To describe the impact of Palliative Care Lay Health Advisors on these cancer patients': a) knowledge of providers of pain and symptom treatment, b) communication about life-sustaining treatment choices, c) quality of life, and d) perceived unmet need for treatment of pain and suffering.