Gulitz E, Bustillo-Hernandez M, Kent E B
College of Public Health, University of South Florida, Tampa, USA.
Cancer Pract. 1998 Nov-Dec;6(6):325-32. doi: 10.1046/j.1523-5394.1998.006006325.x.
Lack of physician recommendation is a major predictor of underutilization of breast and cervical cancer screening. The authors conducted a comprehensive two-part study of Florida primary care providers to determine which providers were not screening their older patients and why. This article reports on the study's quantitative survey component.
After an initial mailing of surveys to 2052 randomly sampled, licensed medical and osteopathic physicians, nurse practitioners, and certified nurse midwives, a follow-up mailing and phone calls resulted in 496 usable surveys. Outcome variables were whether or not primary care providers performed screening tests for their asymptomatic, women patients older than 50 years of age. Predictor variables included: age, race, gender, training, specialty, practice size, and location of the providers, and the percentage of older patients that they served.
The best predictors of primary care providers not screening their asymptomatic women patients who were older than 50 years of age were providers also being older than 50, specializing in geriatrics or adult health, and working in a small or rural practice. An analysis of providers' responses to structured survey items related to their own and their patients' attitudes about screening indicated that providers often miss the opportunity to screen due to a combination of patient, provider, practice, and access barriers.
The authors recommend that public health and primary care practitioners collaborate in developing strategies that address areas of potential change for overcoming these four barriers, while also considering the essential public health services of assessment, policy development, and assurance. These strategies should be designed to facilitate the breast and cervical cancer screening process for both providers and patients, so that providers feel more comfortable performing and recommending these important tests, particularly for underserved groups of older women.
缺乏医生推荐是乳腺癌和宫颈癌筛查利用不足的主要预测因素。作者对佛罗里达州的初级保健提供者进行了一项全面的两部分研究,以确定哪些提供者没有为老年患者进行筛查以及原因。本文报告了该研究的定量调查部分。
在向2052名随机抽样的有执照的医学和骨科医生、执业护士和认证助产士初步邮寄调查问卷后,通过后续邮寄和电话随访获得了496份可用问卷。结果变量是初级保健提供者是否为其50岁以上无症状女性患者进行筛查测试。预测变量包括:提供者的年龄、种族、性别、培训、专业、诊所规模和地点,以及他们所服务的老年患者的百分比。
初级保健提供者不为50岁以上无症状女性患者进行筛查的最佳预测因素是提供者年龄也超过50岁、专门从事老年医学或成人健康以及在小型或农村诊所工作。对提供者对与他们自己以及他们患者对筛查态度相关的结构化调查项目的回答分析表明,由于患者、提供者、诊所和获取方面的障碍综合作用,提供者经常错过筛查机会。
作者建议公共卫生和初级保健从业者合作制定策略,解决可能发生变化的领域以克服这四个障碍,同时还要考虑评估、政策制定和保障等基本公共卫生服务。这些策略应旨在为提供者和患者简化乳腺癌和宫颈癌筛查流程,以便提供者在进行和推荐这些重要测试时感觉更自在,特别是对于服务不足的老年女性群体。