Miriyala Sreekar, Nguyen Kirsten V, Park Anika, Hwang Timothy, Aldrich Melinda C, Richmond Jennifer
Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY, USA.
Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, TN, USA.
Ethn Health. 2025 Apr;30(3):372-397. doi: 10.1080/13557858.2025.2458303. Epub 2025 Feb 3.
Lung cancer screening can reduce lung cancer-specific mortality, but it is widely underutilized, especially among minoritized populations that bear a disproportionate burden of lung cancer, such as Black Americans. Racism, discrimination, medical mistrust, and stigma contribute to lower uptake of preventive screenings in general, but the role these factors play in lung cancer screening is unclear. We therefore conducted a scoping review to synthesize the literature regarding how racism, discrimination, medical mistrust, and stigma relate to lung cancer screening.
Informed by PRISMA-ScR guidelines, we searched five databases for relevant literature, and two trained researchers independently reviewed articles for relevance. We conducted a narrative, descriptive analysis of included articles.
A total of 45 studies met our inclusion criteria. Most articles reported on medical mistrust or one of its cognates (e.g. trust and distrust, = 37) and/or stigma ( = 25), with several articles focusing on multiple constructs. Few articles reported on racism ( = 3), and = 1 article reported on discrimination. Results from empirical studies suggest that medical mistrust, distrust, and stigma may be barriers to lung cancer screening, whereas trust in health care providers may facilitate screening. The articles reporting on racism were commentaries calling attention to the impact of racism on lung cancer screening in Black populations.
Overall, novel interventions are needed to promote trust and reduce mistrust, distrust, and stigma in lung cancer screening initiatives. Dedicated efforts are especially needed to understand and address the roles that racism and discrimination may play in lung cancer screening.
肺癌筛查可降低肺癌特异性死亡率,但目前该筛查方式的利用率普遍较低,在肺癌负担过重的少数族裔群体中尤为明显,比如美国黑人。种族主义、歧视、医疗不信任和污名化总体上导致预防性筛查的接受度较低,但这些因素在肺癌筛查中所起的作用尚不清楚。因此,我们进行了一项范围综述,以综合关于种族主义、歧视、医疗不信任和污名化与肺癌筛查之间关系的文献。
依据PRISMA-ScR指南,我们在五个数据库中检索相关文献,两名经过培训的研究人员独立审查文章的相关性。我们对纳入的文章进行了叙述性、描述性分析。
共有45项研究符合我们的纳入标准。大多数文章报道了医疗不信任或其相关概念之一(如信任和不信任,n = 37)和/或污名化(n = 25),有几篇文章关注多个概念。很少有文章报道种族主义(n = 3),只有1篇文章报道了歧视。实证研究结果表明,医疗不信任、不信任和污名化可能是肺癌筛查的障碍,而对医疗服务提供者的信任可能会促进筛查。报道种族主义的文章是评论文章,呼吁关注种族主义对黑人肺癌筛查的影响。
总体而言,需要新的干预措施来促进信任,并减少肺癌筛查倡议中的不信任、怀疑和污名化。尤其需要做出专门努力,以了解和解决种族主义和歧视在肺癌筛查中可能发挥的作用。