Ann Intern Med 1996 Aug 1;125(3):173-82
Comment in:
Ann Intern Med. 1996 Aug 1;125(3):237-9.
Ann Intern Med. 1997 Feb 15;126(4):333-4.
Black women receive less mammography even with similar use of primary
care.
Burns RB, McCarthy EP, Freund KM, Marwill SL, Shwartz M, Ash A, Moskowitz
MA.
Boston University Medical Center Hospital, MA, USA.
BACKGROUND: Black women with breast cancer have a decreased
5-year survival rate in comparison with white women, possibly because
of less frequent use of mammography. Having a regular provider or source
of health care is the most important determinant of mammography use.
OBJECTIVE: To examine whether the difference in mammography
use between elderly black women and elderly white women is related to
the number of visits made to a primary care physician.
DESIGN: Retrospective review of 1990 Health Care Financing
Administration billing files (Medicare part B) from 10 states.
SETTING: Outpatient mammography services in 10 states.
PARTICIPANTS: Black women and white women, 65 years of
age and older, residing in one of the 10 states.
MEASUREMENTS: Any mammogram. Predictors included race,
number of visits to a primary care physician (0, 1, 2, or 3 or more),
median income of ZIP code of residence (a surrogate measure of income),
and state.
RESULTS: The following are findings from Georgia; similar
results were found in each state studied. The mean age of the 335,680
women was 75 years; 20% were black. Sixty-eight percent of the black women
and 69% of the white women made at least one visit to a primary care physician.
Overall, 14% of the women had had mammography; black women had mammography
less often than white women (9% compared with 15%). At each primary care
visit level (1, 2, or 3 or more visits), black women had mammography less
often than white women (1 visit, 7% compared with 15%; 2 visits, 12% compared
with 21%; and 3 or more visits, 12% compared with 20%). Even among women
who had made at least one visit to a primary care physician, a deficit
for blacks occurred in each income quintile (lowest quintile, 13% compared
with 20%; low, 10% compared with 18%; middle, 12% compared with 18%; high,
10% compared with 19%; and highest, 12% compared with 22%) and in each
state (in Georgia, for example, the percentages were 14% compared with
21%). An age-, income-, and state-adjusted logistic model predicting mammography
use for 2.9 million white women in all 10 states shows the powerful effect
of primary care use on mammography (odds ratios for 1, 2, and 3 or more
visits were, respectively, 2.73 [95% CI, 2.70 to 2.77]; 3.98 [CI, 3.93
to 4.03]; and 4.62 [CI, 4.58 to 4.67]). The same model fit to 250 000
black women shows a lesser effect (analogous odds ratios were 1.77 [CI,
1.67 to 1.87]; 2.49 [CI, 2.36 to 2.63]; and 3.15 [CI, 3.04 to 3.25]).
CONCLUSION: Among older women, mammography is used less
often for blacks than for whites. More frequent use of mammography is
associated with more visits to a primary care physician in both groups,
but the deficit for black women persists at each income level and in each
state, even after primary care use is considered. Primary care visits
are less likely to "boost" mammography use for black women than
for white women.
PMID: 8686974 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
Ann Intern Med 1996 Aug 1;125(3):237-9
Comment in:
Ann Intern Med. 1997 Feb 1;126(3):252.
Comment on:
Ann Intern Med. 1996 Aug 1;125(3):173-82.
Ann Intern Med. 1996 Aug 1;125(3):221-32.
A compelling research agenda.
Nickens HW.
Publication Types: Comment; Editorial
PMID: 8686983 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
Ann Intern Med 1997 Feb 15;126(4):333-4
Comment on:
Ann Intern Med. 1996 Aug 1;125(3):173-82.
Mammography use in black women.
Jackson RH, Davis TC.
Publication Types: Comment; Letter
PMID: 9036814 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]