Evaluation of a Telephone Outreach Intervention on Colonoscopy Completion Rates for Patients With Rectal Bleeding.
[BACKGROUND] Rectal bleeding is a common concern among primary care patients and a risk marker for colorectal cancer.
- p-value p = .04
APA
Amat M, Huang D, et al. (2026). Evaluation of a Telephone Outreach Intervention on Colonoscopy Completion Rates for Patients With Rectal Bleeding.. Journal for healthcare quality : official publication of the National Association for Healthcare Quality, 48(1). https://doi.org/10.1097/JHQ.0000000000000514
MLA
Amat M, et al.. "Evaluation of a Telephone Outreach Intervention on Colonoscopy Completion Rates for Patients With Rectal Bleeding.." Journal for healthcare quality : official publication of the National Association for Healthcare Quality, vol. 48, no. 1, 2026.
PMID
41489935
Abstract
[BACKGROUND] Rectal bleeding is a common concern among primary care patients and a risk marker for colorectal cancer. Yet, primary care patients who present with rectal bleeding frequently do not complete timely colonoscopies. We sought to determine if a phone-based, scheduling intervention for patients presenting with rectal bleeding in primary care would improve the rate of scheduling and completion of ordered colonoscopies.
[METHODS] We conducted a nonrandomized pre-post intervention study at an urban, academic, hospital-based primary care clinic. We included patients with a colonoscopy order for rectal bleeding who had not scheduled a colonoscopy within 2 weeks of the order date. We created a baseline cohort from August to October 2022 and an intervention cohort from November 2022 to June 2023. The pilot intervention involved up-to-3 outreach phone calls by a primary care-based phone service representative to study participants.
[RESULTS] Compared to the baseline cohort, patients in the intervention cohort had a significantly higher rate of colonoscopy completion at 365 days ( p = .04). Higher rates in loop closure were seen across demographic cohorts.
[DISCUSSION] Proactive, primary care-based, outreach phone calls increased rates of completion of colonoscopies ordered for rectal bleeding.
[METHODS] We conducted a nonrandomized pre-post intervention study at an urban, academic, hospital-based primary care clinic. We included patients with a colonoscopy order for rectal bleeding who had not scheduled a colonoscopy within 2 weeks of the order date. We created a baseline cohort from August to October 2022 and an intervention cohort from November 2022 to June 2023. The pilot intervention involved up-to-3 outreach phone calls by a primary care-based phone service representative to study participants.
[RESULTS] Compared to the baseline cohort, patients in the intervention cohort had a significantly higher rate of colonoscopy completion at 365 days ( p = .04). Higher rates in loop closure were seen across demographic cohorts.
[DISCUSSION] Proactive, primary care-based, outreach phone calls increased rates of completion of colonoscopies ordered for rectal bleeding.
MeSH Terms
Telephone; Humans; Colonoscopy; Primary Health Care; Appointments and Schedules; Gastrointestinal Hemorrhage; Male; Female; Adult; Middle Aged; Aged