Jacobs Elizabeth A, Karavolos Kelly, Rathouz Paul J, Ferris Timothy G, Powell Lynda H
John H. Stroger Jr Hospital of Cook County and Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, IL 60612, USA.
Am J Public Health. 2005 Aug;95(8):1410-6. doi: 10.2105/AJPH.2004.041418.
We examined the relationship between ability to speak English and receipt of Papanicolaou tests, clinical breast examinations, and mammography in a multiethnic group of women in the United States.
We used longitudinal data from the Study of Women Across the Nation to examine receipt of breast and cervical cancer screening among Chinese, Japanese, Hispanic, and White women who reported reading and speaking (1) only a language other than English, (2) another language more fluently than English, or (3) only English or another language and English with equal fluency. Logistic regression was used to analyze the data.
Reading and speaking only a language other than English and reading and speaking another language more fluently than English, were significantly and negatively associated with receipt of breast and cervical cancer screening in unadjusted models. Although these findings were attenuated in adjusted models, not speaking English well or at all remained negatively associated with receipt of cancer screening.
These findings suggest that language barriers contribute to health disparities by impeding adequate health communication.
我们在美国一个多种族女性群体中,研究了英语会话能力与巴氏试验、临床乳腺检查及乳房X光检查接受情况之间的关系。
我们利用“全国女性研究”的纵向数据,对报告阅读和说(1)仅英语以外的一种语言、(2)比英语更流利的另一种语言、或(3)仅英语或英语与另一种语言流利程度相同的华裔、日裔、西班牙裔和白人女性的乳腺癌和宫颈癌筛查接受情况进行了研究。采用逻辑回归分析数据。
在未调整模型中,仅阅读和说英语以外的一种语言以及阅读和说比英语更流利的另一种语言,与乳腺癌和宫颈癌筛查接受情况显著负相关。尽管在调整模型中这些结果有所减弱,但英语说得不好或根本不会说仍与癌症筛查接受情况呈负相关。
这些发现表明,语言障碍通过阻碍充分的健康沟通导致了健康差异。