Barriers and facilitators for people with severe mental illness accessing cancer screening: A systematic review

Author:

Tuschick Emma1ORCID,Barker Jill1ORCID,Giles Emma L.1,Jones Susan1,Hogg Julie2,Kanmodi Kehinde K.1ORCID,Sill Jula1,Sykes Kate3

Affiliation:

1. School of Health and Life Sciences Teesside University Middlesbrough UK

2. Library Services Teesside University Middlesbrough UK

3. Northumbria University Newcastle Upon Tyne UK

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveEvidence suggests that people with severe mental illness (PwSMI) are 2.1 times more likely to die from cancer before the age of 75, compared to people without Severe mental illness (SMI). Yet, cancer screening uptake is low among PwSMI. This mixed‐methods systematic review aimed to identify the barriers and facilitators for PwSMI deciding to access and attend primary cancer screening of the cervix, breast and colon.MethodsSix electronic databases and two grey literature sources were searched, with 1017 records screened against inclusion criteria. Included papers were appraised and data synthesised using the constructs of Normalisation Process Theory.ResultsTwenty papers met the inclusion criteria. Factors that impact upon uptake of PwSMI accessing cancer screening were found to include age, gender, race, and income. Common barriers to attending screening included poor communication from healthcare staff, stigmatising attitudes, and accessibility problems such as no access to transportation. While, facilitators included social support from friends, family, and healthcare providers.ConclusionsDue to ease and privacy, colorectal screening was found to have fewer barriers when compared to cervical and breast screening. The review identified multiple barriers that can be addressed and targeted to support decision‐making for cancer screening among PwSMI. The protocol was registered with PROSPERO (CRD42022331781).

Funder

National Institute for Health and Care Research

Publisher

Wiley

Reference74 articles.

1. National Institute for Health and Care Research.Cancer Screening across the World is Failing People with Mental Illness;2020.https://evidence.nihr.ac.uk/alert/cancer‐screening‐across‐the‐world‐is‐failing‐people‐with‐mental‐illness/

2. NHS England.Improving Physical Healthcare for People Living with Severe Mental Illness (SMI) in Primary Care: Guidance for CCGs;2018.https://www.england.nhs.uk/publication/improving‐physical‐healthcare‐for‐people‐living‐with‐severe‐mental‐illness‐smi‐in‐primary‐care‐guidance‐for‐ccgs/

3. Public Health England.Severe Mental Illness (SMI) and Physical Health Inequalities: Briefing;2018.https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/severe‐mental‐illness‐smi‐physical‐health‐inequalities/severe‐mental‐illness‐and‐physical‐health‐inequalities‐briefing

4. NHS England.Core20PLUS5 (Adults) – an Approach to Reducing Healthcare Inequalities;2021.https://www.england.nhs.uk/about/equality/equality‐hub/national‐healthcare‐inequalities‐improvement‐programme/core20plus5/

5. Public Health England.Severe Mental Illness (SMI): Inequalities in Cancer Screening Uptake Report;2021.

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