Enhancing lung cancer screening through 'saved by the scan': insights from a multipronged public service advertising campaign.

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

3-5-2026

Publication Title

BMC public health [electronic resource]

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer-related mortality in the United States. Lung cancer screening (LCS) uptake remains low nationally, with disproportionate underuse in racial and ethnic minority populations. This study descriptively evaluated the reach, engagement, and temporal screening trends associated with a multipronged, bilingual, minority-focused public service awareness campaign, "Saved by the Scan" (SBTS), implemented in partnership with a large minority-serving health system in South Florida.

METHODS: This was a retrospective, multi-site study within a large minority-serving health system in South Florida that evaluated low-dose computed tomography (LDCT) volumes and SBTS campaign performance. SBTS, developed by the American Lung Association, was delivered using traditional (newspapers, billboards, bus shelters) and digital (email, social media, search) modalities in English and Spanish. Implementation outcomes included campaign reach, engagement, and tracked conversions, and service outcomes included annual LDCT volumes. Results were summarized using descriptive statistics.

RESULTS: Between 2019 and 2023, 11,175 individuals underwent LDCT. During the campaign reached an estimated 4,607,273 individuals through traditional out-of-home media with campaign tactics including newspaper, billboards, and bus shelters. Another approach was the use of direct email. Out of 133,554 emails sent, 36,877 (27.2%) were opened, with a 6.4% click-to-open rate. For the digital media campaign through using online search, digital display, Facebook and Instagram there was a combined 1,768,438 social media impressions with approximately 16,791 (0.9%) links clicked. Total number of conversions (i.e. LDCT performed) using digital media was estimated to be 337 individuals - 232 (69%) from emails and 105 (31%) from social media. Annual LDCT volumes were 1,716 in 2019, 1,337 in 2020 (reflecting a decline during the COVID-19 pandemic), 2,185 in 2021 (+ 63% vs. 2020), 2,652 in 2022 (+ 21% vs. 2021), and 3,285 in 2023 (+ 24% vs. 2022), with the steepest increase occurring after SBTS launch in late 2021.

CONCLUSIONS: This multipronged, bilingual SBTS campaign was associated with increased LDCT use in a predominantly Hispanic community, highlighting the potential of health system-led, minority-focused implementation efforts to enhance LCS uptake. Digital media yielded modest conversion rates but substantial reach, supporting their role as a complementary strategy to traditional media in minority-focused screening implementation campaigns.

DOI

10.1186/s12889-026-26564-5

ISSN

1471-2458

PubMed ID

41787383

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