Magasi Susan, Reis Judy Panko, Wilson Tom, Rosen Allison, Ferlin Alli, VanPuymbrouck Laura
Prog Community Health Partnersh. 2019;13(5):61-69. doi: 10.1353/cpr.2019.0039.
Women with disabilities are an unrecognized cancer disparities population who experience well-documented barriers to breast cancer screening. There is a critical need for targeted, community-directed programing to address these disparities.
To describe the trajectory of a long-term community-academic partnership aimed at understanding and addressing breast cancer screening disparities among women with disabilities.
Phase 1 was a thematic qualitative focus group study (n = 40) with women with physical disabilities to understand their breast cancer screening experiences. Phase 2 was the application of an equity-focused knowledge translation (KT) process that brought together breast cancer survivors with disabilities and graduate applied health students in KT collaboratives to create innovative, evidence-informed knowledge products. Phase 3 included the development of community-based programming.
In phase 1, women with disabilities identified provider and patient barriers to breast cancer screening, including a lack of provider knowledge and respect for individuals with disabilities, lack of accessibility, the history of stigma and mistreatment within the health care setting, and treatment fatigue. In phase 2, KT collaboratives created the short film "ScreenABLE" to educate providers and community members about physical and attitudinal barriers to cancer screening. In phase 3, community, academic, and clinical partners collaborated to create ScreenABLE Saturday, a wellness fair and free accessible mammograms, for women with disabilities with programming developed to directly address cancer screening barriers identified from the phase 1 research.
Long-term sustained partnerships between academic, disability, and clinical partners are needed to address the complex issues that perpetuate breast cancer screening disparities among women with disabilities.
残疾女性是一个未被认识到的癌症差异人群,她们在乳腺癌筛查方面面临诸多有充分记录的障碍。迫切需要有针对性的、面向社区的项目来解决这些差异。
描述一个长期社区 - 学术伙伴关系的发展历程,旨在了解和解决残疾女性乳腺癌筛查差异问题。
第一阶段是对身体残疾女性进行主题性定性焦点小组研究(n = 40),以了解她们的乳腺癌筛查经历。第二阶段是应用以公平为重点的知识转化(KT)过程,将残疾乳腺癌幸存者和从事KT合作项目的应用健康专业研究生聚集在一起,以创建创新的、基于证据的知识产品。第三阶段包括开展基于社区的项目。
在第一阶段,残疾女性确定了乳腺癌筛查中的提供者和患者障碍,包括提供者缺乏对残疾个体的了解和尊重、缺乏可及性、医疗环境中的耻辱和虐待历史以及治疗疲劳。在第二阶段,KT合作项目制作了短片《可筛查》,以教育提供者和社区成员了解癌症筛查中的身体和态度障碍。在第三阶段,社区、学术和临床伙伴合作创建了“可筛查周六”活动,这是一个健康博览会和为残疾女性提供免费可及性乳房X光检查的活动,其项目旨在直接解决第一阶段研究中确定的癌症筛查障碍。
学术、残疾和临床伙伴之间需要长期持续的伙伴关系,以解决使残疾女性乳腺癌筛查差异长期存在的复杂问题。