4.4 Article

Breast cancer screening during the COVID-19 pandemic: moving from disparities to health equity

Journal

JNCI-JOURNAL OF THE NATIONAL CANCER INSTITUTE
Volume 115, Issue 2, Pages 139-145

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/jnci/djac172

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The COVID-19 pandemic has severely disrupted routine healthcare in the United States, including the complete halt of screening mammography and the emergence of disparities in screening rates across different populations. These disparities can be attributed to various structural and contextual factors, with strategies to close the gaps requiring a multifaceted approach that addresses both healthcare systems/practices and policy-level measures. Addressing health disparities necessitates comprehensive solutions that tackle the complex conditions leading to disparities.
The COVID-19 pandemic created unprecedented disruptions to routine health care in the United States. Screening mammography, a cornerstone of breast cancer control and prevention, was completely halted in the spring of 2020, and screening programs have continued to face challenges with subsequent COVID-19 waves. Although screening mammography rates decreased for all women during the pandemic, a number of studies have now clearly documented that reductions in screening have been greater for some populations than others. Specifically, minoritized women have been screened at lower rates than White women across studies, although the specific patterns of disparity vary depending on the populations and communities studied. We posit that these disparities are likely due to a variety of structural and contextual factors, including the differential impact of COVID-19 on communities. We also outline key considerations for closing gaps in screening mammography. First, practices, health systems, and communities must measure screening mammography use to identify whether gaps exist and which populations are most affected. Second, we propose that strategies to close disparities in breast cancer screening must be multifaceted, targeting the health system or practice, but also structural factors at the policy level. Health disparities arise from a complex set of conditions, and multimodal solutions that address the complex, multifactorial conditions that lead to disparities may be more likely to succeed and are necessary for promoting health equity.

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