Kempe Karin L, Larson Rebecca Sam, Shetterley Susan, Wilkinson Andra
Department of Population Care and Prevention Services at Kaiser Permanente Colorado in Denver, USA.
Perm J. 2013 Winter;17(1):38-44. doi: 10.7812/TPP/12-068.
Kaiser Permanente Colorado is an integrated health care system that uses automatic reminder programs and reduces barriers to access preventive services, including financial barriers. Breast cancer screening rates have not improved during the last five years, and rates differ between subgroups: for example, black and Latina women have lower rates of mammography screening than other racial groups.
We retrospectively evaluated data from 47,946 women age 52 to 69 years who had continuous membership for 24 months but had not undergone mammography. Poisson regression models estimated relative risk for the impact of self-identified race/ethnicity, socioeconomic characteristics, health status, and use of health care services on screening completion.
The distribution of race/ethnicity among unscreened women was 55.5% white, 7.0% Latina, and 3.7% black, but race/ethnicity data were missing for 29%. Of these, no record of race/ethnicity was available for 86.7%, and for 5.1%, the data request was recorded but the women declined to identify their race/ethnicity. Nonwhite ethnicity increased risk of screening failure if black, Latina, "other" (eg, American Indian), or missing race/ethnicity. Population-attributable risks were low for minorities compared with the group for whom race/ethnicity data was missing. A greater number of office visits in any setting was associated with greater likelihood of undergoing mammography. Women with missing race/ethnicity data had fewer visits and were less likely to have an identified primary care physician.
Greater improvement in mammography screening rates could be achieved in our population by increasing screening among women with missing race/ethnicity data, rather than by targeting those who are known to be of racial/ethnic minorities. Efforts to address screening disparities have been refocused on inreach and outreach to our "missing women."
科罗拉多州凯撒医疗集团是一个综合医疗保健系统,该系统采用自动提醒程序并减少获取预防性服务的障碍,包括经济障碍。在过去五年中,乳腺癌筛查率并未提高,且不同亚组之间的筛查率存在差异:例如,黑人女性和拉丁裔女性的乳房X光检查筛查率低于其他种族群体。
我们回顾性评估了47946名年龄在52至69岁之间的女性的数据,这些女性连续参保24个月但未进行乳房X光检查。泊松回归模型估计了自我认定的种族/族裔、社会经济特征、健康状况以及医疗服务使用情况对筛查完成情况的影响的相对风险。
未接受筛查的女性中,种族/族裔分布为55.5%为白人,7.0%为拉丁裔,3.7%为黑人,但29%的女性缺少种族/族裔数据。其中,86.7%没有种族/族裔记录,5.1%的数据请求已记录,但这些女性拒绝表明自己的种族/族裔。如果是黑人、拉丁裔、“其他”(如美国印第安人)或缺少种族/族裔数据,非白人种族会增加筛查失败的风险。与缺少种族/族裔数据的群体相比,少数族裔的人群归因风险较低。在任何环境下进行更多的门诊就诊与接受乳房X光检查的可能性更大相关。缺少种族/族裔数据的女性就诊次数较少,且不太可能有确定的初级保健医生。
通过增加对缺少种族/族裔数据的女性的筛查,而不是针对已知的少数族裔女性,我们人群中的乳房X光检查筛查率可能会有更大提高。解决筛查差异的努力已重新聚焦于对我们“失踪女性”的内部和外部拓展。