Black women's distress matters: Examining gendered racial disparities in psycho‐oncology referral rates

Author:

Aburizik Arwa1,Brindle Madeline2,Johnson Ebonee3,Provencio Alyssa4,Kivlighan Martin4,LeBeau Brandon4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Internal Medicine Carver College of Medicine, University of Iowa Iowa City Iowa USA

2. Carver College of Medicine, University of Iowa Iowa City Iowa USA

3. Department of Community and Behavioral Health University of Iowa Iowa City Iowa USA

4. Department of Psychological and Quantitative Foundations University of Iowa Iowa City Iowa USA

Abstract

AbstractObjectivePresently, there is a lack of research examining gendered racial disparities in psycho‐oncology referral rates for Black women with cancer. Informed by intersectionality, gendered racism, and the Strong Black Woman framework, this study sought to examine the possibility that Black women are adversely affected by such phenomena as evidenced by lower probability of being referred to psycho‐oncology services compared to Black men, White women and White men.MethodsData for this study consisted of 1598 cancer patients who received psychosocial distress screening at a comprehensive cancer center in a large Midwest teaching hospital. Multilevel logistic modeling was used to examine the probability of referral to psycho‐oncology services for Black women, Black men, White women, and White men while controlling for patient‐reported emotional and practical problems and psychosocial distress.ResultsResults indicated that Black women had the lowest probability of being referred to psycho‐oncology services (2%). In comparison, the probability of being referred to psycho‐oncology were 10% for White women, 9% for Black men, and 5% for White men. Additionally, as nurses' patient caseload decreased, the probability of being referred to psycho‐oncology increased for Black men, White men, and White women. In contrast, nurses' patient caseload had little effect on the probability of being referred to psycho‐oncology for Black women.ConclusionsThese findings suggest unique factors influence psycho‐oncology referral rates for Black women. Findings are discussed with particular focus on how to enhance equitable care for Black women with cancer.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Oncology,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology

Reference46 articles.

1. Health Equity Among Black Women in the United States

2. Deaths: final data for 2018. National Cancer Institute;Murphy SL;Natl Vital Stat Rep,2021

3. HoyertDL MiniñoAM.Maternal Mortality in the United States: Changes in Coding Publication and Data Release 2018;2020.

4. Disparities in Breast Cancer: Narrowing the Gap

5. Knowledge and Resistance: Black Women Talk about Racism in the Netherlands and the USA

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