Between-Race Differences in Processes Predicting Physician Communication for African American and European American Recipients of Breast Density Notifications

Author:

Manning Mark1ORCID,Albrecht Terrance L1,Penner Louis1,Purrington Kristen1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Oncology, Karmanos Cancer Institute/Wayne State University School of Medicine, Detroit, MI, USA

Abstract

Abstract Background Breast density notification laws mandate reporting of dense breast to applicable women. The same psychological and systemic barriers that yield between-race differences in mammography use will probably yield between-race differences in women’s psychological and behavioral responses to breast density notifications. Purpose We used the theory of planned behavior as a framework to examine between-race differences in the likelihood of following-up with physicians after receiving breast density notifications and to examine differences in African American and Caucasian American women’s behavioral decision-making processes. Methods A subset of 212 African American and Caucasian American women who participated in an initial and follow-up survey examining responses to breast density notifications were examined for this study. Participants reported background and demographic measures, psychological responses to receiving notifications, and planned behavior measures related to following up with physicians approximately 2 weeks after receiving their mammogram reports. Participants self-reported their behaviors 3 months later. Results There were no between-race differences in self-reported physician communication; however, there were differences in processes that predicted behavior. For Caucasian American women, behavioral intentions, education, and income predicted behaviors. Instead of intentions, group-based medical suspicion, confusion, breast cancer worry, and breast density anxiety predicted behaviors for African American women. Conclusions Behavioral decision-making processes for Caucasian American women were in line with well-validated theoretical predictions. For African American women, race-related medical suspicion, prior breast density awareness, and emotional responses to breast density notifications predicted behavior. The results highlight the need to focus on racially distinct psychological targets when designing interventions to support guideline concordant behavioral decisions among women who receive breast density notifications.

Funder

Karmanos Cancer Institute

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,General Psychology

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