Fruchter R G, Remy J C, Burnett W S, Boyce J G
Am J Public Health. 1986 Jul;76(7):797-9. doi: 10.2105/ajph.76.7.797.
At a public hospital serving the low-income community in Brooklyn, New York, invasive cervical cancer (ICC) was diagnosed in more advanced stages in Haitian and English-speaking Caribbean immigrants than in US-born Black women. In Brooklyn as a whole, only Haitians had more advanced ICC. Fewer Haitians had preinvasive cancer or ICC detected by a Pap test. Data are consistent with less frequent screening among low-income immigrants.
在纽约布鲁克林一家为低收入社区服务的公立医院,与美国出生的黑人女性相比,海地及讲英语的加勒比移民被诊断出的浸润性宫颈癌(ICC)处于更晚期阶段。在整个布鲁克林,只有海地人的ICC病情更严重。通过巴氏试验检测出的癌前病变或ICC的海地人较少。这些数据与低收入移民筛查频率较低的情况相符。