Active Mammography and Counseling
Monitoreo Activo de Mamografía y Orientación
University of Puerto Rico Comprehensive Cancer Center
1,020 participants
Jan 14, 2026
INTERVENTIONAL
Conditions
Summary
The Puerto Rico Community Engagement Alliance (PR-CEAL) is an NIH-funded initiative which aims to improve health literacy and healthcare access across Puerto Rico. In 2024, the program developed a new study which goal is to improve breast cancer screening rates in Puerto Rico titled Monitoreo Activo de Mamografía y Orientación (MAMO). This multi-level study will recruit non-adherent women based on residence, age (40 to 74 years old), and having had two or more years since their last breast cancer screening. The intervention will focus on 39 municipalities with screening rates below the median, through three different levels: educational, navigation, and integration. At the educational level, the intervention will employ a community-based recruitment strategy led by Community Health Workers (CHWs), who will identify eligible women at community venues and conduct follow-up via telephone to provide educational support. Drawing on findings from a previous pilot study and addressing barriers specific to non- adherent women, the navigation-level intervention will incorporate the role of a Community Navigator to deliver tailored support and facilitate breast cancer screening uptake through collaboration with local networks and partnerships. The integration-level intervention will build upon the educational and navigation components by enhancing knowledge, attitudes, skills, and organizational processes within Federally Qualified Health Clinics (FQHCs). This component is designed to foster a supportive healthcare environment that encourages routine mammography screening. The integration-level intervention will be implemented in four FQHCs across PR.
Eligibility
Inclusion Criteria6
- Women (biological sex at birth) aged 40- 74
- Residing in one of 39 municipalities across Puerto Rico whose having a low breast cancer screening rate below the median (38.6%): Aibonito, Arecibo, Barceloneta, Caguas, Camuy, Comerío, Corozal, Florida, Las Piedras, Loíza, Naguabo, Vieques, Villalba, Añasco, Carolina, Cayey, Dorado, Guayanilla, Guaynabo, Isabela, Juana Diaz, Juncos, Luquillo, Manatí, Peñuelas, Quebradillas, Cabo Rojo, Canóvanas, Ceiba, Ciales, Coamo, Culebra, Fajardo, Morovis, Ponce, Sabana Grande, San Juan, Santa Isabel, and Trujillo Alto.
- Overdue for breast cancer screening by one or more years, in accordance with annual guidelines
- Adequate cognitive orientation as verified by a brief version of the Mini-Mental State Examination
- Access to a telephone for follow-up and communication
- Ability to read and comprehend Spanish to engage with educational materials.
Exclusion Criteria7
- Women outside the specified age range (40-74)
- Up to date in breast cancer screening according to the annual recommendations.
- No cognitive orientation
- Participants without access to a telephone
- Unable to read and comprehend Spanish
- Women undergoing active cancer treatment
- History of radical mastectomy
Interested in this trial?
Get notified about updates and connect with the research team.
Interventions
This component was developed using Intervention Mapping (IM) as a methodological framework and adapted from two evidence-based programs: "Unidas por la Vida" and "Nuestra Cocina: Mesa Buena, Vida Sana". The intervention includes one-on-one educational sessions led by Community Health Workers (CHWs), who will use tailored educational materials to guide participants and provide them with a take-home kit to promote and assist with mammography scheduling.
At this level, a community navigator service will be implemented to help participants overcome barriers to mammography screening. Seven community navigators will provide personalized support to address common challenges, including scheduling appointments, transportation, and access to healthcare services. These interventions leverage culturally tailored training to enable navigators to address barriers to breast cancer screening and enhance health literacy within their communities. The study intervention will include a specially designed training program for Community Navigators, emphasizing a culturally tailored curriculum to equip participants with the knowledge and skills necessary to educate and support their communities effectively.
The provider-level interventions will engage both clinical and administrative personnel who are actively employed at Federally Qualified Health Clinics (FQHCs). Two educational modules are being developed for the integration-level intervention. The educational content is designed to address provider-level barriers to breast cancer screening-an area that remains underexplored in the literature compared to patient-level factors. By engaging healthcare providers in FQHCs, this level aims to ensure women receive strong, consistent recommendations for mammography from trusted healthcare professionals.
Locations(1)
View Full Details on ClinicalTrials.gov
For the most up-to-date information, visit the official listing.
NCT07238088