Nearly 90,000 adolescent and young adults (AYA: defined by the National Cancer Institute \[NCI\] as age 15-39 years) are diagnosed with cancer annually in the United States (US), 85% of whom are expected to become long-term survivors. Compared to their peers, these survivors have an increased burden of chronic health conditions. AYAs also face devastating financial toxicity, defined as the negative personal financial impact of healthcare costs, resulting not only from the cost of care, but also from interrupted education, exclusion from the workforce, and developmental disruption in achieving or maintaining independence. In fact, AYA cancer survivors experience disproportionately higher rates of financial toxicity and unemployment, associated with poorer overall survival and bankruptcy, compared to older cancer survivors. Among AYA survivors, those with public insurance, who live in areas of high deprivation, and/or who are Black or Hispanic/Latino (hereafter Hispanic) have lower rates of 5- and 10-year survival, likely due in part to adverse social determinants of health (SDOH) and unmet health-related social needs (HRSN: financial strain, food insecurity, un/underinsurance, unstable housing, and suboptimal education).
The research team has studied financial toxicity and HRSN among Spanish- and English-preferring AYAs and their caregivers to develop participant-informed interventions to address unmet HRSN. This study is pilot testing a needs navigation model, adapted from an adult-directed model, among Spanish- and English-speaking AYAs who screen positive for high financial toxicity or unmet HRSN and are receiving care at Columbia University Irving Medical Center (CUIMC) in New York City. This model includes tailored needs navigation delivered over 6 months by a community organization that provides telephone-based case management to people facing life-limiting illness. Though AYA participants are initially interested in this AYA-HRSN navigation model (consent rates \>85%), uptake and sustained engagement are rarely observed. During monthly check-ins with participants, investigators identified two gaps in the current model. First, AYAs do not perceive the model to be acceptable in addressing their needs because it is not accessible digitally. Findhelp.org is an established, digital network of local resources that can be leveraged to address this gap. Second, AYAs and caregivers request support to address educational and vocational needs, a resource not available through our community partner. Informed by these preliminary findings and given that AYAs are digital experts, the objective of this R21 proposal is to adapt the needs navigation model to a digital platform, while adding vocational navigation, to better engage AYAs and address their unmet HRSN. Using mixed methods, the investigators will refine the intervention (Aim 1) and conduct a randomized pilot study to measure its feasibility and acceptability (Aim 2) and compare the impact of the digital HRSN navigation intervention with elevated usual care (Aim 3). This study will enroll and randomize (1:1) 80 English- and Spanish-speaking AYAs who are within 6 months of completing curative-intent cancer treatment.