Department of Nutrition and Exercise Physiology, Elson S. Floyd College of Medicine, Washington State University, 412 E Spokane Falls Blvd, Spokane, WA, 99202, USA.
Institute for Research and Education To Advance Community Health, Elson S. Floyd College of Medicine, Washington State University, Seattle, WA, USA.
Breast Cancer. 2022 Jul;29(4):740-746. doi: 10.1007/s12282-022-01352-2. Epub 2022 Apr 2.
Routine screening mammography at two-year intervals is widely recommended for the prevention and early detection of breast cancer for women who are 50 years + . Racial and other sociodemographic inequities in routine cancer screening are well-documented, but less is known about how these long-standing inequities were impacted by the disruption in health services during the COVID-19 pandemic. Early in the pandemic, cancer screening and other prevention services were suspended or delayed, and these disruptions may have had to disproportionate impact on some sociodemographic groups. We tested the hypothesis that inequities in screening mammography widened during the pandemic.
A secondary analysis of patient data from a large state-wide, non-profit healthcare system in Washington State. Analyses were based on two mutually exclusive cohorts of women 50 years or older. The first cohort (n = 18,197) were those women screened in 2017 who would have been due for repeat screening in 2019 (prior to the pandemic's onset). The second cohort (n = 16,391) were women screened in 2018 due in 2020. Explanatory variables were obtained from patient records and included race/ethnicity, age, rural or urban residence, and insurance type. Multivariable logistic regression models estimated odds of two-year screening for each cohort separately. Combining both cohorts, interaction models were used to test for differences in inequities before and during the pandemic.
Significant sociodemographic differences in screening were confirmed during the pandemic, but these were similar to those that existed prior. Based on interaction models, women using Medicaid insurance and of Asian race experienced significantly steeper declines in screening than privately insured and white women (Odds ratios [95% CI] of 0.74 [0.58-0.95] and 0.76 [0.59-0.97] for Medicaid and Asian race, respectively). All other sociodemographic inequities in screening during 2020 were not significantly different from those in 2019.
Our findings confirm inequities for screening mammograms during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic and provide evidence that these largely reflect the inequities in screening that were present before the pandemic. Policies and interventions to tackle long-standing inequities in use of preventive services may help ensure continuity of care for all, but especially for racial and ethnic minorities and the socioeconomically disadvantaged.
对于 50 岁及以上的女性,广泛推荐每两年进行一次常规乳房 X 线筛查,以预防和早期发现乳腺癌。种族和其他社会人口统计学方面的癌症常规筛查不平等现象已有充分记录,但对于这些长期存在的不平等现象如何受到 COVID-19 大流行期间卫生服务中断的影响,了解甚少。在大流行早期,癌症筛查和其他预防服务被暂停或推迟,这些中断可能对某些社会人口统计学群体产生不成比例的影响。我们检验了这样一个假设,即在大流行期间,筛查乳房 X 光片的不平等现象扩大了。
这是对华盛顿州一个大型非营利性医疗保健系统的患者数据进行的二次分析。分析基于两个相互排斥的 50 岁及以上女性队列。第一个队列(n=18197)是那些在 2017 年接受筛查的女性,她们本应在 2019 年(大流行前)再次接受筛查。第二个队列(n=16391)是那些在 2018 年接受筛查的女性,她们应在 2020 年接受筛查。从患者记录中获取解释变量,包括种族/民族、年龄、农村或城市居住情况和保险类型。使用多变量逻辑回归模型分别为每个队列估计两年筛查的几率。合并两个队列后,使用交互模型检验大流行前后不平等程度的差异。
大流行期间证实了筛查方面存在显著的社会人口统计学差异,但这些差异与大流行前存在的差异相似。根据交互模型,使用医疗补助保险和亚洲种族的女性筛查率下降幅度明显大于私人保险和白人女性(医疗补助保险和亚洲种族的比值比[95%置信区间]分别为 0.74[0.58-0.95]和 0.76[0.59-0.97])。2020 年所有其他社会人口统计学方面的筛查不平等现象与 2019 年相比没有显著差异。
我们的研究结果证实了 COVID-19 大流行第一年筛查乳房 X 光片存在不平等现象,并提供了证据表明,这些不平等现象在大流行前就存在。解决预防性服务使用方面长期存在的不平等问题的政策和干预措施,可能有助于确保所有人,尤其是少数族裔和社会经济弱势群体的医疗服务连续性。