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Cancer
Screening Rates low among Older Medicaid
Patients
Newswise — Only about half of
Medicaid recipients age 50 and older appear
to receive recommended screening tests for
colorectal, breast and cervical cancer,
according to a report in the October 13
issue of Archives of Internal Medicine, one
of the JAMA/Archives journals.
These three types of cancer
are potentially curable when detected early,
and eliminating disparities in screenings is
part of the government’s Healthy People 2010
plan, according to background information in
the article.
“State Medicaid agencies are
in a unique position to monitor and improve
the quality of care received by some of the
nation’s most vulnerable citizens,” the
authors write.
“Medicaid is the largest
provider of health insurance for minority
populations in America.
"Medicaid
recipients, by virtue of Medicaid
eligibility criteria, frequently share other
characteristics associated with
health-related disparities: low income, old
age, and/or chronic disability because of
advanced disease, physical limitation,
severe mental illness or developmental
disability.”
C. Annette DuBard, M.D.,
M.P.H., of the North Carolina Department of
Health and Human Services, Raleigh, and the
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Cecil G. Sheps Center for Health Services
Research, and colleagues studied a
representative sample of 1,951 North
Carolina Medicaid recipients age 50 and
older.
Medical records were reviewed
to determine whether physicians had
recommended and patients had received cancer
screening examinations.
“Documentation that
colorectal, breast and cervical cancer
screening was recommended by the primary
care provider was found for only 52.7
percent, 60.4 percent and 51.5 percent of
eligible patients, respectively,” the
authors write.
“Documented rates of adequate
screening were 28.2 percent for colorectal
cancer, 31.7 percent for mammography within
two years and 31.6 percent for Papanicolaou
[cervical cancer] test within three years.
"When
medical record and claims data were
combined, approximately half of eligible
patients had evidence of screening.”
Despite Medicaid recipients’
access to primary care and full coverage of
cancer screening services, these rates are
substantially lower than those in the
general population, the authors note.
“Lack of a screening
recommendation by the physician, rather than
patient refusal of recommended tests,
accounted for most instances of screening
delinquency,” they conclude.
“Efforts to increase cancer
screening rates among Medicaid recipients
must address patient, physician and
organizational barriers to the routine
identification and delivery of preventive
services.”
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