Cancer Screening Change Packages Toolkit

What to know

The Cancer Screening Change Packages are intended to support the delivery of cancer screening services that have received A or B recommendations from the United States Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF).

A doctor talking to a man and a woman

Introduction

The Cancer Screening Change Packages:

  • Are intended for health care and quality improvement professionals, public health departments, and organizations involved in increasing cancer screening efforts.
  • Present a list of evidence- and practice-based changes to choose from to improve cancer screening.
  • Provide practical tools and resources that can be used or adapted to improve the reach and effectiveness of their cancer screening efforts.
  • Take into consideration that the decision to start the screening process may begin before a person engages with the health care system (see Appendix A in the Overview PDF). Therefore, these change packages provide tools and resources to address information gaps and barriers to recommended cancer screening.

Overview ‎

See the Cancer Screening Change Packages: Overview for definitions of the focus areas and the list of change concepts and change ideas for each area.

What's included

How to use the Cancer Screening Change Packages

Cancer Screening Change Packages

This video features Avid Reza, MD, MPH, and Stephanie Melillo, MPH discussing the functions of the Cancer Screening Change Package.

The Cancer Screening Change Packages offer a menu of strategies and associated tools and resources to support cancer screening services. Health care professionals—and the public health departments, community-based organizations, and others who collaborate with them—can choose tools and resources from this menu to address processes that need improvement. Some may approach these change packages with a specific goal in mind. Others may need to identify the areas for improvement. The steps below explain how to use the Cancer Screening Change Packages.

To get started:

  • Engage team members and potential partners. These may include physicians, pharmacists, nurses, medical assistants, social workers, community health workers, patient navigators, quality improvement coordinators, health informaticians, administrators, health department staff, and members of community-based organizations.
  • Establish leadership support and commitment to improving cancer screening.
  • Identify one or more champions to engage leadership and lead efforts.

Working with the change package

  • Become familiar with the organizing framework: focus areas, change concepts, and change ideas.
  • Review the flow charts in Appendix A of the Cancer Screening Change Packages: Overview to understand the cancer screening process that patients follow and the opportunities to improve screening.
  • Determine if a needs assessment would help identify focus areas, change concepts, and change ideas that would be most effective and feasible.
  • Select a focus area based on circumstances and needs.
  • Identify appropriate evidence-based and practice-based change concepts and change ideas.
  • Select tools and resources for implementation and adapt as necessary.
  • Implement, monitor, and evaluate the selected changes and associated tools and resources.

Send feedback

The Cancer Screening Change Packages may be updated periodically as screening processes evolve, and as tools and resources are developed and disseminated. Although the project team used a systematic search, some tools and resources may have been missed. Please send comments, questions, and suggestions to dcpccommunications@cdc.gov.

Disclaimer

CDC has identified resources that may be beneficial to support the delivery of cancer screening. However, CDC does not endorse any specific resource, nor is the list of resources provided an exhaustive list of all available resources.