Department of Global and Community Health, College of Health and Humanities, George Mason University, Fairfax, VA, USA.
Department of Sociology, Anthropology, and Health Administration and Policy, University of Maryland, Baltimore County, 1000 Hilltop Circle, Baltimore, MD, 21250, USA.
Cancer Causes Control. 2021 Nov;32(11):1247-1256. doi: 10.1007/s10552-021-01475-5. Epub 2021 Jul 3.
Routine health checkup and cancer screening rates among women are suboptimal, partially due to the health care disparities by race/ethnicity in the USA. This study examined the previously understudied associations between routine health checkup, cervical cancer screening, and breast cancer screening by race/ethnicity using the national representative sample of women.
Data were obtained from three cycles (2017, 2018, and 2019) of the Health Information National Trends Survey (HINTS) (n = 12,227). Survey-weighted logistic regressions were evaluated to assess associations between routine health checkup and cervical and breast cancer screening compliance with the established guidelines with the age criteria and frequency of screening by race/ethnicity (Black, White, Hispanic, and Other).
This study included 6,941 women in the cervical cancer screening and 8,005 women for breast cancer screening, considering the age criteria. Women who had received routine health checkups were more likely to meet the cervical cancer screening guideline (Odds ratio 3.24, p < 0.05) and breast cancer screening guideline (OR 5.86, p < 0.05) compared to women who did not receive routine health checkups. While routine health checkups were associated with both types of cancer screenings in most racial/ethnic groups, analyses stratified by race/ethnicity suggest that Hispanic women and Other women did not benefit from routine health checkup in relation to cervical and breast cancer screening, respectively.
Promotion of routine health checkups could promote cancer screening among women across racial/ethnic groups, although specific racial/ethnic groups may require additional support.
美国的种族/民族健康差异导致女性常规健康检查和癌症筛查率不理想。本研究使用全国女性代表性样本,以前所未有的方式研究了常规健康检查、宫颈癌筛查和乳腺癌筛查之间与种族/民族相关的关联。
数据来自健康信息国家趋势调查(HINTS)的三个周期(2017、2018 和 2019 年)(n=12227)。评估了经过调查加权的逻辑回归,以评估常规健康检查与宫颈癌和乳腺癌筛查之间的关联,该关联符合既定的指南,考虑了年龄标准和按种族/民族(黑人、白人、西班牙裔和其他)进行的筛查频率。
考虑到年龄标准,本研究纳入了 6941 名宫颈癌筛查女性和 8005 名乳腺癌筛查女性。与未接受常规健康检查的女性相比,接受常规健康检查的女性更有可能符合宫颈癌筛查指南(优势比 3.24,p<0.05)和乳腺癌筛查指南(OR 5.86,p<0.05)。虽然常规健康检查与大多数种族/民族群体的两种癌症筛查都有关联,但按种族/民族分层的分析表明,西班牙裔女性和其他女性在宫颈癌和乳腺癌筛查方面均未从常规健康检查中受益。
促进常规健康检查可以促进不同种族/民族群体的女性进行癌症筛查,尽管特定的种族/民族群体可能需要额外的支持。