Surveillance and Health Equity Sciences, Office of Cancer Research and Implementation, American Cancer Society, Atlanta, Georgia.
Early Detection and Screening, Office of Cancer Research and Implementation, American Cancer Society, Atlanta, Georgia.
Cancer. 2022 Feb 15;128(4):737-745. doi: 10.1002/cncr.33966. Epub 2021 Nov 8.
During the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic, US unemployment rates rose to historic highs, and they remain nearly double those of prepandemic levels. Employers are the most common source of health insurance among nonelderly adults. Thus, job loss may lead to a loss of health insurance and reduce access to cancer screening. This study examined associations between unemployment, health insurance, and cancer screening to inform the pandemic's potential impacts on early cancer detection.
Up-to-date and past-year breast, cervical, colorectal, and prostate cancer screening prevalences were computed for nonelderly respondents (aged <65 years) with 2000-2018 National Health Interview Survey data. Multivariable logistic regression models with marginal probabilities were used to estimate unemployed-versus-employed unadjusted and adjusted prevalence ratios.
Unemployed adults (2000-2018) were 4 times more likely to lack insurance than employed adults (41.4% vs 10.0%; P < .001). Unemployed adults had a significantly lower up-to-date prevalence of screening for cervical cancer (78.5% vs 86.2%; P < .001), breast cancer (67.8% vs 77.5%; P < .001), colorectal cancer (41.9 vs 48.5%; P < .001), and prostate cancer (25.4% vs 36.4%; P < .001). These differences were eliminated after accounting for health insurance coverage.
Unemployment was adversely associated with up-to-date cancer screening, and this was fully explained by a lack of health insurance. Ensuring the continuation of health insurance coverage after job loss may mitigate the pandemic's economic distress and future economic downturns' impact on cancer screening.
在 2019 年冠状病毒病大流行期间,美国的失业率上升至历史高位,且仍接近大流行前水平的两倍。在非老年成年人中,雇主是最常见的健康保险来源。因此,失业可能导致失去健康保险并减少获得癌症筛查的机会。本研究旨在探讨失业、健康保险与癌症筛查之间的关联,以了解大流行对早期癌症检测的潜在影响。
利用 2000-2018 年全国健康访谈调查数据,计算了非老年受访者(年龄<65 岁)的最新和过去一年乳腺癌、宫颈癌、结直肠癌和前列腺癌筛查率。使用边缘概率多变量逻辑回归模型估计了失业与就业人群之间未经调整和调整后的流行率比值。
与就业成年人(10.0%)相比,失业成年人(2000-2018 年)更有可能没有保险(41.4%;P<0.001)。失业成年人进行最新宫颈癌(78.5%比 86.2%;P<0.001)、乳腺癌(67.8%比 77.5%;P<0.001)、结直肠癌(41.9%比 48.5%;P<0.001)和前列腺癌(25.4%比 36.4%;P<0.001)筛查的比例显著较低。在考虑了健康保险覆盖范围后,这些差异就不复存在了。
失业与最新癌症筛查呈负相关,而健康保险的缺乏完全解释了这一点。在失业后确保继续获得健康保险可能有助于减轻大流行的经济压力以及未来经济衰退对癌症筛查的影响。