Cancer
1999 Dec 1;86(11):2378-90
Equitable access to cancer services: A review of barriers to quality care.
Mandelblatt JS, Yabroff KR, Kerner JF.
Department of Medicine, Lombardi Cancer Center, Georgetown University
Medical Center, Washington, DC 20007, USA.
BACKGROUND: Barriers to cancer care have been documented
in nearly all settings and populations; such barriers represent potentially
avoidable morbidity or mortality. A conceptual framework was used to describe
patient, provider, and system barriers to cancer services.
METHODS: A review of the English language literature
on cancer care from 1980-1998 was conducted; key research was summarized
for each domain in the conceptual model.
RESULTS: Key patient barriers are related to old age,
minority race, and low socioeconomic class; the common pathways by which
these sociodemographic factors appear to mediate cancer outcomes include
social class and race-related or class-related attitudes. Providers are
often ill-prepared to communicate the complexities of cancer care to their
diverse patient populations; constraints of the medical care system also
can impede the delivery of care. To the authors' knowledge the impact
of the rapid growth in managed care organizations (MCOs) on access to
care has yet to be evaluated fully. Although MCOs historically have provided
high levels of cancer screening in healthy populations, to the authors'
knowledge there are fewer data regarding outcomes for elderly and poor
populations and for treatment services.
CONCLUSIONS: Additional research is needed to develop
and test interventions to overcome barriers to care and evaluate the impact
of the growth of managed care on access to cancer care for diverse populations.
Copyright 1999 American Cancer Society.
Publication Types: Review; Review, Tutorial
PMID: 10590381 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]