Increased disparities associated with black women and abnormal cervical cancer screening follow-up
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Authors
Boitano, Teresa K.L.
Ketch, Peter
Maier, Julia G.
Nguyen, Christine T.
Huh, Warner K.
Straughn, J. Michael
Scarinci, Isabel C.
Issue Date
2022-07-16
Type
Article
Language
en_US
Keywords
Cervical Cancer Screening , Abnormal Screening Follow-Up , Racial Disparities , HPV Testing , Lost to Follow-Up
Alternative Title
Abstract
Background:
To determine whether race and ethnicity impacts patient adherence to follow-up for colposcopy after abnormal cervical cancer screening.
Methods:
This retrospective chart review included women that were randomly selected from patients presenting to our colposcopy clinic from 1/2019 to 12/2019. Inclusion criteria were females age ≥21 years-old and appropriate referral for colposcopy. Patients were grouped into three categories: (1) ADHERENT to follow-up if they came to their first scheduled appointment; (2) DELAYED if they presented more than three months from their original referral (usually missing 1–3 appointments); and (3) NOT ADHERENT if they did not show for their appointment after referral. Analysis was performed using SPSS v.26.
Results:
284 women met inclusion criteria for the study. The majority of women were Black (65.2 %) followed by non-Hispanic Whites (20.0 %) and Latinx (14.8 %). Overall, 39.1 % were ADHERENT, 18.6 % were DELAYED, and 42.3 % were NOT ADHERENT. When compared with non-Hispanic White women, there was a significant difference between race/ethnicity and timing of follow-up (p = 0.03). Blacks were more likely to be NOT ADHERENT (45.9 %; p = 0.03), and Latinx and Blacks were the most likely to be DELAYED (35.7 % and 21.1 %; p = 0.03). Private insurance patients were more likely to be ADHERENT for care compared with un-/underinsured patients (78.9 vs 27.8 %, p = 0.0001).
Conclusion:
There is inadequate follow-up after abnormal cervical cancer screening across all races/ethnicities; however, lack of adherence is higher in Black patients. Moreover, 25% of Hispanic and Black women present in a delayed fashion. Culturally relevant assessments and interventions are needed to understand and address these gaps.
Description
Citation
Boitano, T. K. L., Ketch, P., Maier, J. G., Nguyen, C. T., Huh, W. K., Michael Straughn, J., & Scarinci, I. C. (2022). Increased disparities associated with black women and abnormal cervical cancer screening follow-up. Gynecologic oncology reports, 42, 101041. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gore.2022.101041
Publisher
Gynecologic Oncology Reports