Barriers Preclude
Rural Women from Breast Cancer Screening
Behind the Cancer Headlines®
While breast cancer screening in rural
Recent advances in breast cancer screening and treatments have
led to an important reduction in death rates from breast cancer in American
women in recent years. While early detection has been shown to reduce breast
cancer deaths, its impact on mortality rates across the nation depends on large
numbers of women getting screened. Current screening rates approach 40 percent
of eligible women, far less than the national goal of 80 percent. Women in
rural
In 1996 an intervention designed to increase screening among
low-income women called the Robeson County Outreach Screening and Education
(ROSE) Project began in
African-American women and, to a significantly greater extent, Native American women had less information and more inaccurate beliefs about screening compared to Caucasian women. For example, 43 percent of women did not identify "mammogram" as a breast cancer screening test, with a significantly larger proportion of Caucasians (70 percent) able to do so. African-Americans reported less self-perceived risk of breast cancer than other groups while Native Americans perceived greater risk than other groups.
Overall, pain, embarrassment, and lack of time were major reasons for women not electing screening, while lack of knowledge about testing options and recommendations or risk factors further promoted poor utilization. Moreover, despite most women having annual checkups by a doctor, more than two-thirds reported no encouragement or recommendation for a mammogram by their doctor.
The authors conclude that "the results point to groups of
women in need of interventions to change beliefs, reduce barriers, and improve
knowledge in order to improve adherence to screening guidelines." They add, "low-income
women are in need of encouragement to be screened and to be made aware of
opportunities to obtain low-cost mammography."
SOURCE:
Cancer,