Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, Department of Emergency Medicine, New Brunswick, New Jersey.
Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, Department of Family Medicine and Community Health, New Brunswick, New Jersey.
West J Emerg Med. 2024 Jan;25(1):101-110. doi: 10.5811/westjem.60400.
People without reliable access to healthcare are more likely to be diagnosed with late-stage cancer that could have been treated more effectively if diagnosed earlier. Emergency departments (ED) may be a novel place for cancer screening education for underserved patients. In this study we sought to determine patient characteristics and barriers to cancer screening for those patients who presented to a large, academic safety-net ED and were overdue for breast, cervical, and colorectal cancer screening since the coronavirus 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic.
Adult ED patients eligible for at least one cancer screening based on US Preventive Serivces Task Force guidelines completed a web-based survey. We examined the association of demographic characteristics and having a personal physician with being overdue on screening using chi-square or the Fisher exact test for categorical variables and -tests for continuous variables.
Of 221 participants, 144 were eligible for colorectal, 96 for cervical, and 55 for breast cancer screening. Of eligible patients, 46% (25/55) were overdue for breast cancer screening, 43% (62/144) for colorectal, and 40% (38/96) for cervical cancer screening. There were no significant characteristics associated with breast cancer screening. Being overdue for cervical cancer screening was significantly more likely for patients who were of Asian race ( = 0.02), had less than a high school diploma ( = 0.01), and were without a routine checkup within the prior five years ( = 0.01). Overdue for colorectal cancer screening was associated with patients not having insurance ( = 0.04), being in their 40s ( = 0.03), being Hispanic ( = 0.01), and not having a primary care physician (=0.01). Of 97 patients overdue for at least one screening, the most common barriers were cost (37%), lack of time (37%), and lack of knowledge of screening recommendations (34%). Only 8.3% reported that the COVID-19 pandemic delayed their screening.
The ED may be a novel setting to target patients for cancer screening education. Future work that refers patients to free screening programs and primary care physicians may help improve disparities in cancer screening and cancer mortality rates for underserved populations.
无法获得可靠医疗保健的人更有可能被诊断出晚期癌症,如果早期诊断,这些癌症本可以更有效地治疗。急诊科 (ED) 可能是为服务不足的患者进行癌症筛查教育的新场所。在这项研究中,我们旨在确定那些因 2019 年冠状病毒病 (COVID-19) 大流行而无法前往医疗机构的患者,在来到一家大型学术性急诊服务中心就诊后,他们的癌症筛查特征和障碍。
符合美国预防服务工作组指南规定的至少一种癌症筛查的成年 ED 患者完成了一项基于网络的调查。我们使用卡方检验或 Fisher 精确检验比较分类变量,使用 t 检验比较连续变量,分析人口统计学特征和有私人医生与筛查延迟之间的关联。
在 221 名参与者中,有 144 名符合结直肠癌筛查条件,96 名符合宫颈癌筛查条件,55 名符合乳腺癌筛查条件。在符合条件的患者中,46%(25/55)的人乳腺癌筛查延迟,43%(62/144)的人结直肠癌筛查延迟,40%(38/96)的人宫颈癌筛查延迟。没有与乳腺癌筛查相关的显著特征。与宫颈癌筛查延迟相关的特征是亚裔种族(=0.02)、高中以下学历(=0.01)和过去五年内没有常规体检(=0.01)。结直肠癌筛查延迟与没有保险(=0.04)、40 多岁(=0.03)、西班牙裔(=0.01)和没有初级保健医生(=0.01)有关。在 97 名至少有一项筛查延迟的患者中,最常见的障碍是费用(37%)、缺乏时间(37%)和缺乏筛查建议知识(34%)。只有 8.3%的人报告 COVID-19 大流行延迟了他们的筛查。
ED 可能是为癌症筛查教育提供目标人群的新场所。未来的工作如果能将患者转介到免费的筛查项目和初级保健医生那里,可能有助于减少服务不足人群的癌症筛查和癌症死亡率方面的差异。