Center for Community Health Integration, Case Western Reserve University, 11000 Cedar Ave., Ste. 402, Cleveland, OH, 44106-7136, USA.
Case Comprehensive Cancer Center, Cleveland, OH, USA.
BMC Womens Health. 2022 Aug 21;22(1):354. doi: 10.1186/s12905-022-01938-0.
Black women diagnosed with breast cancer in the U.S. tend to experience significantly longer waits to begin treatment than do their white counterparts, and such treatment delay has been associated with poorer survival. We sought to identify the factors driving or mitigating treatment delay among Black women in an urban community where treatment delay is common.
Applying the SaTScan method to data from Ohio's state cancer registry, we identified the community within Cuyahoga County, Ohio (home to Cleveland) with the highest degree of breast cancer treatment delay from 2010 through 2015. We then recruited breast cancer survivors living in the target community, their family caregivers, and professionals serving breast cancer patients in this community. Participants completed semi-structured interviews focused on identifying barriers to and facilitators of timely breast cancer treatment initiation after diagnosis.
Factors reported to impact timely treatment fell into three primary themes: informational, intrapersonal, and logistical. Informational barriers included erroneous beliefs and lack of information about processes of care; intrapersonal barriers centered on mistrust, fear, and denial; while logistical barriers involved transportation and financial access, as well as patients' own caregiving obligations. An informational facilitator was the provision of objective and understandable disease information, and a common intrapersonal facilitator was faith. Logistical facilitators included financial counseling and mechanisms to assist with Medicaid enrollment. Crosscutting these themes, and mentioned frequently, was the centrality of both patient navigators and support networks (formal and, especially, informal) as critical lifelines for overcoming barriers and leveraging facilitating factors.
The present study describes the numerous hurdles to timely breast cancer treatment faced by Black women in a high-risk urban community. These hurdles, as well as corresponding facilitators, can be classified as informational, intrapersonal, and logistical. Observing similar results on a larger scale could inform the design of interventions and policies to reduce race-based disparities in processes of cancer care.
在美国,被诊断患有乳腺癌的黑人女性往往比白人女性等待开始治疗的时间长得多,而这种治疗延迟与生存状况较差有关。我们试图确定在一个治疗延迟较为常见的城市社区中,驱动或减轻黑人女性治疗延迟的因素。
我们应用 SaTScan 方法分析了俄亥俄州癌症登记处的数据,确定了俄亥俄州凯霍加县(克利夫兰市所在地)的一个社区,该社区在 2010 年至 2015 年期间乳腺癌治疗延迟程度最高。然后,我们招募了居住在目标社区的乳腺癌幸存者、他们的家庭护理人员以及为该社区的乳腺癌患者服务的专业人员。参与者完成了半结构化访谈,重点是确定诊断后及时开始乳腺癌治疗的障碍和促进因素。
报告称,影响及时治疗的因素分为三个主要主题:信息、个人和后勤。信息障碍包括对护理过程的错误信念和缺乏信息;个人障碍主要集中在不信任、恐惧和否认;而后勤障碍涉及交通和财务获取,以及患者自己的护理义务。一个信息促进因素是提供客观和易懂的疾病信息,一个常见的个人促进因素是信仰。后勤促进因素包括财务咨询和帮助参加医疗补助的机制。贯穿这些主题并经常提到的是,患者导航员和支持网络(正式的,尤其是非正式的)作为克服障碍和利用促进因素的关键生命线的核心地位。
本研究描述了高危城市社区中黑人女性及时接受乳腺癌治疗所面临的众多障碍。这些障碍以及相应的促进因素可以分为信息、个人和后勤三个方面。在更大范围内观察到类似的结果可以为减少癌症护理过程中基于种族的差异的干预措施和政策的设计提供信息。