Department of Medicine, Section of General Internal Medicine, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL 60637, USA.
J Gen Intern Med. 2012 Aug;27(8):1016-32. doi: 10.1007/s11606-012-2052-2.
To systematically review the literature to determine which interventions improve the screening, diagnosis or treatment of cervical cancer for racial and/or ethnic minorities.
Medline on OVID, Cochrane Register of Controlled Trials, CINAHL, PsycINFO and Cochrane Systematic Reviews.
STUDY ELIGIBILITY CRITERIA, PARTICIPANTS AND INTERVENTIONS: We searched the above databases for original articles published in English with at least one intervention designed to improve cervical cancer prevention, screening, diagnosis or treatment that linked participants to the healthcare system; that focused on US racial and/or ethnic minority populations; and that measured health outcomes. Articles were reviewed to determine the population, intervention(s), and outcomes. Articles published through August 2010 were included.
One author rated the methodological quality of each of the included articles. The strength of evidence was assessed using the criteria developed by the GRADE Working Group.
Thirty-one studies were included. The strength of evidence is moderate that telephone support with navigation increases the rate of screening for cervical cancer in Spanish- and English-speaking populations; low that education delivered by lay health educators with navigation increases the rate of screening for cervical cancer for Latinas, Chinese Americans and Vietnamese Americans; low that a single visit for screening for cervical cancer and follow up of an abnormal result improves the diagnosis and treatment of premalignant disease of the cervix for Latinas; and low that telephone counseling increases the diagnosis and treatment of premalignant lesions of the cervix for African Americans.
Studies that did not focus on racial and/or ethnic minority populations may have been excluded. In addition, this review excluded interventions that did not link racial and ethnic minorities to the health care system. While inclusion of these studies may have altered our findings, they were outside the scope of our review.
Patient navigation with telephone support or education may be effective at improving screening, diagnosis, and treatment among racial and ethnic minorities. Research is needed to determine the applicability of the findings beyond the populations studied.
系统地回顾文献,以确定哪些干预措施可以改善对少数族裔的宫颈癌筛查、诊断或治疗。
OVID 上的 Medline、Cochrane 对照试验注册中心、CINAHL、PsycINFO 和 Cochrane 系统评价。
研究入选标准、参与者和干预措施:我们在上述数据库中搜索了以英文发表的原始文章,这些文章至少有一项旨在改善宫颈癌预防、筛查、诊断或治疗的干预措施,将参与者与医疗保健系统联系起来;重点关注美国少数族裔;并测量健康结果。文章经过审查,以确定人群、干预措施和结果。纳入了截至 2010 年 8 月发表的文章。
一位作者对每一篇纳入文章的方法学质量进行了评分。使用 GRADE 工作组制定的标准评估证据的强度。
共纳入 31 项研究。有中等强度的证据表明,西班牙语和英语人群中,电话支持加导航服务可提高宫颈癌筛查率;有低强度的证据表明,拉丁裔、美籍华裔和越裔美国人中,由非专业健康教育者提供教育加导航服务可提高宫颈癌筛查率;有低强度的证据表明,单次宫颈癌筛查和异常结果的随访可改善拉丁裔的宫颈癌前疾病的诊断和治疗;有低强度的证据表明,电话咨询可提高非裔美国人宫颈癌前病变的诊断和治疗。
可能排除了未关注少数族裔人群的研究。此外,本综述排除了未将少数族裔与医疗保健系统联系起来的干预措施。虽然纳入这些研究可能会改变我们的发现,但它们超出了我们综述的范围。
患者导航与电话支持或教育相结合可能在改善少数族裔的筛查、诊断和治疗方面有效。需要研究以确定这些发现是否适用于研究人群以外的人群。