Factors associated with women's adherence to mammography screening guidelines
- 1 April 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 33 (1) , 29-53
Abstract
Objective. To examine individual and environmental factors associated with adherence to mammography screening guidelines. Data Sources. A unique data set that combines a national probability sample (1992 National Health Interview Survey); a national probability sample of mammography facility characteristics (1992 National Survey of Mammography Facilities); county-level data on 1990 HMO market share; and county-level data on the supply of primary care providers (1991 Area Resource File). Study Design. The design was cross-sectional, Data Extraction/Analysis. Data sets were linked to create an individual-level sample of women ages 50-74 (weighted n = 2,026). We used multipart, sequential logistic regression models to examine the predictors of having ever had mammography, having had recent mammography, and adherence to guidelines. We categorized women as adherent if they reported a lifetime number of exams appropriate for their age (based on screening every two years) and they reported having had an exam in the past two years. Principal Findings. Only 27 percent of women had the age-appropriate number of screening exams (range 16 percent-37 percent), while 59 percent of women had been screened within two years. Women were significantly more likely to adhere to screening guidelines if they reported participating with their doctor in the decision to be screened; were younger; had smaller families, higher education and income, and a recent Pap smear; reported breast problems; and lived in an area with a higher percentage of mammography facilities with reminder systems, no shortage of primary care providers, higher HMO market share, and higher screening charges. Conclusions. A small percentage of women adhere to screening guidelines, suggesting that adherence needs to become a focus of clinical, programmatic, and policy efforts.Keywords
This publication has 63 references indexed in Scilit:
- Breast cancer control among the underserved — An overviewBreast Cancer Research and Treatment, 1996
- Potential Use of Home HIV TestingNew England Journal of Medicine, 1995
- Patterns of Health Services Utilization and Mammography Use Among Women Aged 50 to 59 Years in the Quebec Medicare SystemMedical Care, 1995
- Breast cancer screening with mammography: overview of Swedish randomised trialsThe Lancet, 1993
- Factors Associated with Adherence to Breast Cancer Screening among Working WomenJournal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine, 1992
- Randomized study of mammography screening — preliminary report on mortality in the stockholm trialBreast Cancer Research and Treatment, 1991
- Promoting cancer screening. A randomized, controlled trial of three interventionsArchives of internal medicine (1960), 1989
- The Swedish two county trial of mammographic screening for breast cancer: recent results and calculation of benefit.Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health, 1989
- Mammographic screening and mortality from breast cancer: the Malmo mammographic screening trial.BMJ, 1988
- A Controlled Trial of the Effect of a Prepaid Group Practice on Use of ServicesNew England Journal of Medicine, 1984