Arch
Intern Med 1997 Jul 14;157(13):1462-70
Continuity of care and the use of breast and cervical cancer screening
services in a multiethnic community.
O'Malley AS, Mandelblatt J, Gold K, Cagney KA, Kerner J.
Clinical Economics Research Unit, Georgetown University Medical Center,
Washington, DC, USA.
OBJECTIVE: To examine how continuity of care affects
the use of breast and cervical cancer screening in a multiethnic population.
METHODS: All data came from a structured telephone survey
of a population-based quota sample designed to determine the cancer prevention
needs of multiethnic blacks and Hispanics in New York, NY, in 1992. The
study included 1420 women of 7 racial/ethnic groups: US-born blacks, English-speaking
Caribbean-born blacks, Haitian blacks, and Puerto Rican, Dominican, Colombian,
and Ecuadorian Hispanics. The main outcome measures were ever and recently
having had a Papanicolaou smear, clinical breast examination (CBE), or
mammogram.
RESULTS: Among respondents who qualified for the survey
on the basis of age and ethnicity,
the refusal rate for completing the interview was 2.1%. Compared with
women without a usual site of care, those with a usual site, but no regular
clinician, were 1.56, 2.45 (P < or = .01), and 2.32 (P < or = .05)
times as likely ever to have received a Papanicolaou smear, CBE, or mammogram,
respectively and 1.84, 1.92 (P < or = .05), and 1.75 times as likely
to have received a recent Papanicolaou smear, CBE, or mammogram, respectively.
Compared with women without a usual site of care, women with a regular
clinician at that usual site of care were 2.63 (P < or = .01), 2.83
(P < or = .01), and 2.30 (P < or = .05) times as likely ever to
have received a Papanicolaou smear, CBE, or mammogram, and were 2.00 (P
< or = .05), 2.65 (P < or = .01), and 1.40 times as likely to have
recently received a Papanicolaou smear, CBE, or mammogram, respectively
(adjusted odds ratios). For uninsured women, presence of a usual site
of care was associated with increases in recent use of cancer screening
for all screening tests.
CONCLUSIONS: There is a linear trend in increasing breast
and cervical cancer screening rates when one goes from having no usual
source of care, to having a usual source, and to having a regular clinician
at that usual source. Emphasis on continuity of care, especially on usual
source of care, may help to bridge the gap in access to cancer prevention
services faced by minority women.
PMID: 9224225 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]