美国南佛罗里达州一家社区卫生中心的黑人女性乳腺造影筛查障碍。

Medical Research Archives Pub Date : 2023-04-01 Epub Date: 2023-04-25 DOI:10.18103/mra.v11i4.3814
Tarsha Jones, Karen Wisdom-Chambers, Katherine Freeman, Karethy Edwards
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摘要

背景:在美国,黑人/非裔美国妇女患有乳腺癌症的健康差异不成比例,死亡率比白人妇女高40%。乳房X光检查被认为是缩小差距的关键工具,但黑人女性在筛查方面遇到障碍,更有可能被诊断为晚期癌症。本研究的目的是评估乳房X光检查筛查的相对频率,并检查在我们由护士领导的社区卫生中心接受护理的女性中筛查的感知和实际障碍。方法:在冠军健康信念模型的指导下,我们进行了一项调查,检查乳房X光检查的频率和对癌症的信念,包括对乳腺X光检查筛查的易感性、益处和障碍的感知。结果:共有30名黑人/非裔美国女性完成了这项调查。参与者的平均年龄为54.3岁±9.17(SD);43.3%的人受过高中或以下教育;50%的人年收入低于60000美元;26.7%没有保险;10%接受医疗补助;只有50%是全职工作。我们发现,只有一半的参与者报告每年进行乳房X光检查16次(53.3%),每6个月进行1次(3.3%),每2-3年进行8次(26.6%),5次(16.7%)一生中从未进行过乳房X光。经常被提及的障碍包括:“做乳房X光检查对我来说不方便”做乳房X光检查可能会导致乳腺癌我对癌症的治疗将比癌症本身更糟糕接受癌症治疗会给我带来很多问题其他健康问题会使我无法进行乳房X光检查;担心做乳房X光检查会让我无法做;买不起乳房X光检查会让我无法做。没有医疗保险也是一个障碍。结论:这项研究发现,佛罗里达州一家社区卫生中心的低收入黑人女性对年度筛查乳房X光检查的利用率不理想,女性报告了一些障碍。鉴于癌症在黑人/非裔美国妇女中的高死亡率,我们在我们的卫生系统中集成了患者导航器,以减少癌症筛查、后续护理的障碍,并促进及时获得治疗,从而最终减少癌症健康差距,促进健康公平。
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Barriers to Mammography Screening among Black Women at a Community Health Center in South Florida, USA.

Background: In the United States (US), Black/African American women suffer disproportionately from breast cancer health disparities with a 40% higher death rate compared to White women. Mammography screening is considered a critical tool in mitigating disparities, yet Black women experience barriers to screening and are more likely to be diagnosed with advanced-stage breast cancer. The purpose of this study was to assess the relative frequency of mammography screening and to examine perceived and actual barriers to screening among women who receive care in our nurse-led community health center.

Methods: We conducted a survey examining frequency of mammography screening and beliefs about breast cancer including perceived susceptibility, perceived benefits, and perceived barriers to mammography screening, guided by the Champion Health Belief Model.

Results: A total of 30 Black/African American women completed the survey. The mean age of the participants was 54.3 years ± 9.17 (SD); 43.3% had a high school education or less; 50% had incomes below $60,000 per year; 26.7% were uninsured; 10% were on Medicaid; and only 50% were working full-time. We found that only half of the participants reported having annual mammograms 16 (53.3%), 1 (3.3%) every 6 months, 8 (26.6%) every 2-3 years, and 5 (16.7%) never had a mammogram in their lifetime. Frequently cited barriers included: 'getting a mammogram would be inconvenient for me'; 'getting a mammogram could cause breast cancer'; 'the treatment I would get for breast cancer would be worse than the cancer itself'; 'being treated for breast cancer would cause me a lot of problems'; 'other health problems would keep me from having a mammogram'; concern about pain with having a mammogram would keep me from having one; and not being able to afford a mammogram would keep me from having one'. Having no health insurance was also a barrier.

Conclusion: This study found suboptimal utilization of annual screening mammograms among low-income Black women at a community health center in Florida and women reported several barriers. Given the high mortality rate of breast cancer among Black/African American women, we have integrated a Patient Navigator in our health system to reduce barriers to breast cancer screening, follow-up care, and to facilitate timely access to treatment, thus ultimately reducing breast cancer health disparities and promoting health equity.

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