4.8 Review

Social determinants of health and US cancer screening interventions: A systematic review

Journal

CA-A CANCER JOURNAL FOR CLINICIANS
Volume 73, Issue 5, Pages 461-479

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.3322/caac.21801

Keywords

cancer screening; early detection of cancer; health equity; implementation science; social determinants of health; United States

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This study conducted a systematic review of US-based cancer screening intervention studies and explored the linkages between social determinants of health (SDOH) and screening. SDOH interventions can increase screening rates by increasing community demand and access. The findings can guide future research to reduce screening inequities in the US.
There remains a need to synthesize linkages between social determinants of health (SDOH) and cancer screening to reduce persistent inequities contributing to the US cancer burden. The authors conducted a systematic review of US-based breast, cervical, colorectal, and lung cancer screening intervention studies to summarize how SDOH have been considered in interventions and relationships between SDOH and screening. Five databases were searched for peer-reviewed research articles published in English between 2010 and 2021. The Covidence software platform was used to screen articles and extract data using a standardized template. Data items included study and intervention characteristics, SDOH intervention components and measures, and screening outcomes. The findings were summarized using descriptive statistics and narratives. The review included 144 studies among diverse population groups. SDOH interventions increased screening rates overall by a median of 8.4 percentage points (interquartile interval, 1.8-18.8 percentage points). The objective of most interventions was to increase community demand (90.3%) and access (84.0%) to screening. SDOH interventions related to health care access and quality were most prevalent (227 unique intervention components). Other SDOH, including educational, social/community, environmental, and economic factors, were less common (90, 52, 21, and zero intervention components, respectively). Studies that included analyses of health policy, access to care, and lower costs yielded the largest proportions of favorable associations with screening outcomes. SDOH were predominantly measured at the individual level. This review describes how SDOH have been considered in the design and evaluation of cancer screening interventions and effect sizes for SDOH interventions. Findings may guide future intervention and implementation research aiming to reduce US screening inequities.

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