Social risk factors and cancer prevention care among patients in community health-care settings.

IF 4.1 Q2 ONCOLOGY JNCI Cancer Spectrum Pub Date : 2024-11-01 DOI:10.1093/jncics/pkae115
Matthew P Banegas, Jean O'Malley, Jorge Kaufmann, Miguel Marino, Laura M Gottlieb, Nathalie Huguet, Adjoa Anyane-Yeboa, Rachel Gold
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Abstract

Background: Social risks are negatively associated with receipt of cancer preventive care. As knowledge is lacking on the pathways underlying these associations, we investigated associations between patient-reported social risks and colorectal cancer (CRC), cervical cancer, and breast cancer screening order provision and screening completion.

Methods: This study included patients eligible for CRC, cervical cancer, or breast cancer screening at 186 community-based clinics between July 1, 2015, and February 29, 2020. Outcomes included up-to-date status for indicated cancer screenings at baseline; percentage of subsequent study months in which patients were up-to-date on screenings; screening order receipt; and screening completion. Independent variables were patient-reported food insecurity, transportation barriers, and housing instability. Analyses used covariate-adjusted generalized estimating equation models, stratified by social risk.

Results: Patients with documented social risks were less likely to be up-to-date on any cancer screening at baseline and in most cases had a lower rate of total study months up-to-date on screenings. All cancer screenings were ordered less often for food-insecure patients. Cervical cancer screening was ordered less often for transportation-insecure patients. The likelihood of completing a screening test differed statistically significantly by select social risks: Cervical cancer and CRC screening rates were lower among food-insecure patients, and CRC screening rates were lower among transportation-insecure patients. The likelihood of breast cancer screening completion did not differ by social risk status.

Conclusion: Social risks affect both the ordering and the receipt of cancer screening. Research is needed on strategies to mitigate the impact of different social risks on cancer early-detection services.

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社区卫生保健机构患者的社会风险因素与癌症预防护理
背景:社会风险与接受癌症预防护理呈负相关。由于对这些关联的潜在途径缺乏了解,我们调查了患者报告的社会风险与结直肠癌(CRC)、宫颈癌(CVC)和乳腺癌(BC)筛查顺序提供和筛查完成之间的关系。方法:本研究纳入了2015年7月1日至2020年2月29日期间186个社区诊所中符合CRC、CVC或BC筛查条件的患者。结果包括:基线时癌症筛查的最新状况;在随后的研究月份中,患者接受最新筛查的百分比;筛选订单收据;和筛选完成。独立变量为患者报告的食物不安全、交通障碍和住房不稳定。分析采用协变量调整广义估计方程模型,按社会风险分层。结果:有社会风险记录的患者不太可能在基线时进行最新的任何癌症筛查,并且在大多数情况下,最新筛查的总研究月率较低。对于食物不安全的患者,所有癌症筛查的频率都较低。对于交通不安全的患者,CVC筛查的频率较低。完成筛查测试的可能性因选择的社会风险而有显著差异:食物不安全的患者的CVC和CRC筛查率较低,交通不安全的患者的CRC筛查率较低。完成BC筛查的可能性没有因社会风险状况而异。讨论:社会风险影响癌症筛查的订购和接收。需要研究减轻不同社会风险对癌症早期检测服务影响的策略。
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来源期刊
JNCI Cancer Spectrum
JNCI Cancer Spectrum Medicine-Oncology
CiteScore
7.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
80
审稿时长
18 weeks
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