School of Social Work, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities, Saint Paul, Minnesota 55108, USA.
J Womens Health (Larchmt). 2010 Oct;19(10):1877-84. doi: 10.1089/jwh.2009.1783.
Ethnic minorities are frequently considered as one homogeneous group in research, and this trend is particularly true for Asian Americans. This article seeks to uncover the intragroup differences in cancer screening behavior among subgroups of Asian American women by disaggregating them into six subgroups. The subgroups were compared with non-Latina white women to examine differences in breast and cancer screening rates and relevant factors associated with receiving these screenings.
Three-year merged data from the 2001, 2003, and 2005 California Health Interview Survey (CHIS) were used to investigate the subgroup differences. Samples for the current study were restricted to non-Latina white and Asian American women whose age was ≥ 18 years (n = 58,000) for cervical cancer screening and ≥ 40 years (n = 43,518) for breast cancer screening at the time of the interview.
Results showed marked differences in cancer screening rates among Asian American subgroups and between cancer types. Cervical cancer screening rates were noticeably higher than breast cancer screening rates in all groups. The Korean group consistently showed the lowest rates of both cancer screenings. Japanese ranked the highest (79.5%) in breast cancer screening but the second lowest (79.7%) in cervical cancer screening. Enabling factors, such as having private health insurance and a usual source of care, were found to be the strongest predictors of receiving both breast and cervical cancer screening. Screenings for both types of cancer increased if a woman was married or was born in the United States.
The findings of this study illustrate the heterogeneity that exists among Asian American subgroups in their cancer screening behaviors. Further development of culturally relevant and ethnic-specific cancer prevention strategies and policies that address the subgroup differences within the larger racial/ethnic population are needed. Public health outreach and cancer education should be prioritized to the Asian American women who are more recent arrivals in the United States and have minimal access to healthcare.
少数民族在研究中经常被视为一个同质群体,这种趋势在亚裔美国人中尤为明显。本文旨在通过将亚裔美国女性细分为六个亚组,揭示其癌症筛查行为的组内差异。将这些亚组与非拉丁裔白种女性进行比较,以检查乳腺癌和癌症筛查率的差异以及与接受这些筛查相关的因素。
使用 2001 年、2003 年和 2005 年加利福尼亚健康访谈调查(CHIS)的三年合并数据来研究亚组差异。本研究的样本仅限于年龄在 18 岁及以上(n=58000)的非拉丁裔白种人和亚裔美国女性,在接受采访时进行宫颈癌筛查,年龄在 40 岁及以上(n=43518)进行乳腺癌筛查。
结果表明,亚裔美国人亚组之间以及不同癌症类型之间的癌症筛查率存在显著差异。所有组的宫颈癌筛查率均明显高于乳腺癌筛查率。韩国组的两种癌症筛查率均最低。日本组在乳腺癌筛查中排名最高(79.5%),但在宫颈癌筛查中排名第二低(79.7%)。发现促进因素,如拥有私人医疗保险和常规医疗服务来源,是接受乳腺癌和宫颈癌筛查的最强预测因素。如果女性已婚或出生于美国,那么这两种类型的癌症筛查都会增加。
本研究的结果说明了亚裔美国人亚组在癌症筛查行为方面存在的异质性。需要进一步制定与文化相关和针对特定族裔的癌症预防策略和政策,以解决更大的种族/族裔群体中的亚组差异。应当优先向最近抵达美国且获得医疗保健机会最少的亚裔美国女性进行公共卫生宣传和癌症教育。