Amankwah Ernest, Ngwakongnwi Emmanuel, Quan Hude
Department of Community Health Sciences, Health Canada, First Nations and Inuit Health, Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
Ethn Health. 2009 Aug;14(4):337-49. doi: 10.1080/13557850802699122.
To determine a high-risk group of visible minority women in Canada who do not participate in cervical cancer screening and the reasons why they do not participate.
We combined two cycles of a large Canadian health survey, Canadian Community Health Survey (CCHS), to obtain a large sample size of visible minority women. Proportions of 'never having a Papanicalaou (Pap) test' and 'not having a Pap test within the last three years' were then calculated for different ethnic groups using sampling weights advised by Statistics Canada to account for the complex sampling procedure used in CCHS. A logistic regression model was developed to test the association between demographic and health-related variables and not having a Pap test. To identify visible minority women who were at a high risk of not having a Pap test, we stratified these women simultaneously on three variables that were significant in the logistic regression model.
Visible minority women were more than twice as likely never to have had a Pap test. Among visible minority women, those who recently immigrated to Canada and did not have a regular physician had the highest risk for not having a Pap test. Common reasons reported for not having a Pap test included believing it was not necessary and simply not getting around to it.
Visible minority women in Canada may not be participating in regular Pap testing because of cultural beliefs and a lack of an understanding of the importance of Pap testing. A culturally appropriate cervical cancer screening intervention program that involves members of visible minority communities may increase participation of this subgroup of Canadian women. This study provides preliminary information on why visible minority women in Canada do not participate in cervical cancer screening. However, the lumping together of all visible minority may obscure differences between different ethnic groups. Therefore, further research on each ethnic group is required to develop tailored culturally appropriate intervention.
确定加拿大未参加宫颈癌筛查的少数族裔女性高危群体及其未参加的原因。
我们合并了加拿大一项大型健康调查——加拿大社区健康调查(CCHS)的两个周期,以获取大量少数族裔女性样本。然后根据加拿大统计局建议的抽样权重计算不同种族群体中“从未进行过巴氏试验”和“过去三年未进行巴氏试验”的比例,以考虑CCHS中使用的复杂抽样程序。建立了一个逻辑回归模型来检验人口统计学和健康相关变量与未进行巴氏试验之间的关联。为了识别未进行巴氏试验风险较高的少数族裔女性,我们根据逻辑回归模型中具有显著性的三个变量对这些女性进行了分层。
少数族裔女性从未进行过巴氏试验的可能性是其他人的两倍多。在少数族裔女性中,最近移民到加拿大且没有固定医生的女性未进行巴氏试验的风险最高。报告的未进行巴氏试验的常见原因包括认为没有必要以及就是没时间去做。
加拿大的少数族裔女性可能由于文化信仰以及对巴氏试验重要性缺乏了解而未定期进行巴氏试验。一个涉及少数族裔社区成员的符合文化背景的宫颈癌筛查干预项目可能会提高这一加拿大女性亚群体的参与率。本研究提供了关于加拿大少数族裔女性不参加宫颈癌筛查原因的初步信息。然而,将所有少数族裔归为一类可能会掩盖不同种族群体之间的差异。因此,需要对每个种族群体进行进一步研究,以制定量身定制的符合文化背景的干预措施。