Affiliation:
1. Department of Population Health Dell Medical School University of Texas at Austin Austin Texas USA
2. Department of Internal Medicine Dell Medical School University of Texas at Austin Austin Texas USA
3. Livestrong Cancer Institutes Dell Medical School University of Texas at Austin Austin Texas USA
4. Steve Hicks School of Social Work University of Texas at Austin Austin Texas USA
Abstract
AbstractBackgroundHispanic populations in the United States experience numerous barriers to care access. It is unclear how cancer screening disparities between Hispanic and non‐Hispanic White individuals are explained by access to care, including having a usual source of care and health insurance coverage.MethodsA secondary analysis of the 2019 National Health Interview Survey was conducted and included respondents who were sex‐ and age‐eligible for cervical (n = 8316), breast (n = 6025), or colorectal cancer screening (n = 11,313). The proportion of ever screened and up to date for each screening type was compared. Regression models evaluated whether controlling for reporting a usual source of care and type of health insurance (public, private, none) attenuated disparities between Hispanics and non‐Hispanic White individuals.ResultsHispanic individuals were less likely than non‐Hispanic White individuals to be up to date with cervical cancer screening (71.6% vs. 74.6%) and colorectal cancer screening (52.9% vs. 70.3%), but up‐to‐date screening was similar for breast cancer (78.8% vs. 76.3%). Hispanic individuals (vs. non‐Hispanic White) were less likely to have a usual source of care (77.9% vs. 86.0%) and more likely to be uninsured (23.6% vs. 7.1%). In regressions, insurance fully attenuated cervical cancer disparities. Controlling for both usual source of care and insurance type explained approximately half of the colorectal cancer screening disparities (adjusted risk difference: −8.3 [–11.2 to –4.8]).ConclusionAddressing the high rate of uninsurance among Hispanic individuals could mitigate cancer screening disparities. Future research should build on the relative successes of breast cancer screening and investigate additional barriers for colorectal cancer screening.Plain language summary
This study uses data from a national survey to compare cancer screening use those who identify as Hispanic with those who identify as non‐Hispanic White.
Those who identify as Hispanic are much less likely to be up to date with colorectal cancer screening than those who identify as non‐Hispanic White, slightly less likely to be up to date on cervical cancer screening, and similarly likely to receive breast cancer screening.
Improving insurance coverage is important for health equity, as is further exploring what drives higher use of breast cancer screening and lower use of colorectal cancer screening.
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6 articles.
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