4.6 Article

Racial and ethnic differences in cervical cancer screening barriers and intentions: The My Body My Test-3 HPV self-collection trial among under-screened, low-income women

Journal

PLOS ONE
Volume 17, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0274974

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [5R01CA183891-03]
  2. Infectious Disease Epidemiology Pre-Doctoral Training Fellowship at UNC-CH [T32AI070114]
  3. Cancer Care Quality Training Program Postdoctoral Traineeship [T32CA116339]

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Under-screened women, especially those who are low-income and uninsured, face barriers to cervical cancer screening such as lack of insurance and cost. However, if women perceive screening as not difficult, they are more likely to have an intention to screen. Black women show a higher intention to screen compared to White women, while older women are less likely to intend to screen. Increasing awareness of affordable clinics and expanding access to healthcare insurance may help reduce barriers and increase cervical cancer screening uptake.
Under-screened women are more likely to be diagnosed with invasive cervical cancer at later stages and have worse survival outcomes. Under- or un-insured women, low-income women, and minoritized groups face barriers to screening. Intention to screen is an indicator of future screening behavior, yet is understudied among low-income, under-screened women. Participants were 710 low-income, uninsured or publicly insured women ages 25-64 years in North Carolina who were not up to date on cervical cancer screening according to national guidelines. Participants were asked about barriers to screening and intention to screen. We estimated reported barriers to cervical cancer screening stratified by race and ethnicity (categorized as White, Black, and Hispanic) and assessed predictors of intention to screen. Sixty-one percent of all participants reported 5 or more barriers to screening. The most commonly reported reasons for not getting screened were lack of insurance (White: 71%, Black: 62%, Hispanic/Latina: 63%) and cost (White: 55%, Black: 44%, Hispanic/Latina: 61%). Women were more likely to have an intention to screen if they reported it was not hard to get screening (OR: 1.47 (1.00, 2.15)). Older women reported being less likely to intend to screen. Black women reported being more likely to intend to screen than White women. Lack of health insurance and cost were frequently reported barriers to cervical cancer screening. Increasing knowledge of affordable clinics and expanding access to Medicaid may reduce barriers and increase cervical cancer screening uptake.

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