Cancer
1994 Oct 1;74(7 Suppl):2028-33
Screening mammography and older Hispanic women. Current status and issues.
Fox SA, Roetzheim RG.
RAND, Santa Monica, CA 90407-2138.
BACKGROUND: Little is known about the screening behavior
of older minority women, especially Hispanic women. Data from Los Angeles
were compared to national data to examine any similarities and unique
problems.
METHOD:. In 1990, 726 women from Los Angeles older than
65 years of age were surveyed by telephone after being identified through
a probability sample or through Medicare listings. Mammography experience
and knowledge and attitudes about screening were collected. Differences
in mammography experience by racial/ethnic group were computed using the
chi-square test.
RESULTS: Hispanic women were not underscreened significantly
compared with older white and black women. Approximately three quarters
of Hispanics had had a mammogram in the previous 2 years, compared with
84% of blacks and 82% of whites. Income and education levels were more
explanatory of underscreening than was race. For example, 50% of whites
with incomes of less than $15,000 had been screened in the previous 2
years, compared with 71% of those with higher incomes. Hispanics, however,
reported significantly more concerns about screening and getting breast
cancer than did whites or blacks despite the Hispanics' lower incidence
and mortality rates. Hispanics also reported more health insurance inadequacies
and a poorer quality of life that may interfere with maintenance of screening
behaviors.
CONCLUSIONS: To maintain equal screening across racial/ethnic
groups, national programs should focus on strategies that help Hispanics
acculturate to achieve equal educational and other benefits. To decrease
screening inequities within races and help realize the National Cancer
Institute's Year 2000 goals, income and educational differences will need
to be less pronounced.
PMID: 8087766 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]