Department of Health Disparities Research, The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX 77030, USA.
Department of Psychological, Health, and Learning Sciences, University of Houston, 491 Farish Hall, Houston, TX 77204, USA.
Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2022 Oct 11;19(20):13004. doi: 10.3390/ijerph192013004.
Black women have a slightly lower breast cancer incidence rate than White women, but breast cancer mortality is approximately 40% higher among Black women than among White women. Early detection by mammography may improve survival outcomes. Outlets providing information on cancer and cancer screening often present data, including mammography recommendations, that are unreliable, accessible, and/or inconsistent. We examined associations between sources of cancer information and mammography behavior among Black church-going women. A logistic regression model was used to examine associations between self-reported preferred source of cancer information (provider, cancer organization, social network, internet, or other media (e.g., books, magazines)) and self-reported most recent source of cancer information (same categories as preferred sources), respectively, and having received a mammogram within the prior 12 months. Participants were 832 Black women over 40 years old, recruited from three churches in Houston, Texas. Data were collected in 2012. Overall, 55.41% of participants indicated their preferred source of cancer information was a provider, 21.88% the internet, 11.54% other media, 10.22% a cancer organization, and 0.96% their social network. In contrast, 17.88% of participants indicated their most recent source of cancer information was a provider, 63.02% the internet, 12.04% other media, 4.50% a cancer organization, and 2.55% their social network. About 70% of participants indicated receiving a mammogram in the prior 12 months. Results indicated that women who most recently sought information from the internet had lower odds of having a mammogram than those who most recently sought information from a provider (aOR: 0.546, CI: 0.336-0.886, = 0.014). These results reveal an opportunity to advance health equity by encouraging Black church-going women to obtain cancer information from providers rather than from the internet as a method to enhance mammography use. These results also reveal an opportunity to investigate what modifiable social determinants or other factors prevent Black church-going women from seeking cancer information from their preferred source, which was a provider for the majority of the sample, and designing interventions to better actualize this preference.
黑人女性的乳腺癌发病率略低于白人女性,但黑人女性的乳腺癌死亡率比白人女性高约 40%。通过乳房 X 光检查进行早期发现可能会改善生存结果。提供癌症和癌症筛查信息的渠道经常提供不可靠、可及和/或不一致的数据,包括乳房 X 光检查建议。我们研究了黑人教堂女性获取癌症信息的来源与乳房 X 光检查行为之间的关联。使用逻辑回归模型分别检验了自我报告的首选癌症信息来源(提供者、癌症组织、社交网络、互联网或其他媒体(例如书籍、杂志))与自我报告的最近癌症信息来源(与首选来源相同类别)与在过去 12 个月内接受乳房 X 光检查之间的关联。参与者是来自德克萨斯州休斯顿的三所教堂的 832 名 40 岁以上的黑人女性。数据于 2012 年收集。总体而言,55.41%的参与者表示他们首选的癌症信息来源是提供者,21.88%是互联网,11.54%是其他媒体,10.22%是癌症组织,0.96%是社交网络。相比之下,17.88%的参与者表示他们最近获取癌症信息的来源是提供者,63.02%是互联网,12.04%是其他媒体,4.50%是癌症组织,2.55%是社交网络。约 70%的参与者表示在过去 12 个月内接受了乳房 X 光检查。结果表明,最近从互联网获取信息的女性接受乳房 X 光检查的可能性低于最近从提供者获取信息的女性(调整后的优势比:0.546,95%置信区间:0.336-0.886, = 0.014)。这些结果揭示了一个机会,可以通过鼓励黑人教堂女性从提供者那里获取癌症信息而不是从互联网上获取信息来提高健康公平性,从而增强乳房 X 光检查的使用。这些结果还揭示了一个机会,可以调查是什么可改变的社会决定因素或其他因素阻止黑人教堂女性从她们的首选来源(对于大多数样本来说是提供者)获取癌症信息,并设计干预措施以更好地实现这种偏好。