Marcus A C, Crane L A, Kaplan C P, Goodman K J, Savage E, Gunning J
Division of Cancer Control, Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center, University of California, Los Angeles.
Obstet Gynecol. 1990 Mar;75(3 Pt 1):453-5.
Low-income women are at increased risk of developing cervical cancer compared with middle- and upper-income women. How can poor women be reached for screening and early diagnosis of cervical cancer and its precursor stages? One answer to this question is based on the observation that a high percentage of the unscreened population has received some form of medical care within the previous 5 years. Emergency centers and sexually transmitted disease (STD) clinics often provide such care to patients who lack a regular source of health care. Thus, they represent potential resources for cervical cancer screening. However, in a survey of 19 hospitals whose patient populations include a high proportion of low-income patients, only five reported a protocol for cervical cancer screening in their emergency centers. Similarly, all 11 STD clinics included in this survey reported that fewer than 5% of their female patients had a Papanicolaou smear taken even though virtually all of them received a pelvic examination. Based on these findings, it appears that health care administrators and policymakers could intensify their cancer prevention programs by mobilizing these resources for cancer control.
与中高收入女性相比,低收入女性患宫颈癌的风险更高。如何让贫困女性接受宫颈癌及其癌前阶段的筛查和早期诊断呢?这个问题的一个答案基于这样一个观察结果:在未接受筛查的人群中,有很大比例的人在过去5年内接受过某种形式的医疗护理。急诊中心和性传播疾病(STD)诊所经常为缺乏常规医疗保健来源的患者提供此类护理。因此,它们是宫颈癌筛查的潜在资源。然而,在一项对19家医院的调查中,这些医院的患者群体中低收入患者比例较高,只有5家医院报告其急诊中心有宫颈癌筛查方案。同样,本次调查中的所有11家STD诊所都报告称,尽管几乎所有女性患者都接受了盆腔检查,但接受巴氏涂片检查的女性患者不到5%。基于这些发现,医疗保健管理人员和政策制定者似乎可以通过调动这些资源用于癌症控制来加强他们的癌症预防计划。