New
Service for TodaysSeniorsNetwork.com
readers...roll mouse over, click on
highlighted links in stories to review items
from Amazon
Now, keep up to date
with daily feeds of newly posted stories
about America's Seniors...click on the box
to the left
Perceived
Discrimination affects Screening rates
Newswise — Minority men and
women who perceived discrimination from
their health care providers were less likely
to be screened for colorectal or breast
cancer, according to a report in the August
issue of Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers and
Prevention, a journal of the American
Association for Cancer Research.
“We have yet to achieve
bias-free health care. This has serious
public health implications as we know that
higher levels of screening lead to lower
levels of mortality.
"Clinicians
need to be aware that they may be sending
signals, even unintentionally, that lead
minorities to believe they are being
discriminated against,” said LaVera M.
Crawley, M.D., M.P.H., an assistant
professor at the Stanford University Center
for Biomedical Ethics.
Exactly what those signals
are will need to be determined in future
studies, Crawley says, but the relationship
between perceived discrimination and failing
to get regular screenings is strong.
Crawley and colleagues
analyzed data from the California Health
Interview Survey, which examined cancer
screening trends among African-American,
American-Indian/Alaskan-Native, Asian and
Latino adults. The data set included 11,245
respondents.
“Respondents answered yes or
no to ‘was there ever a time that you would
have gotten better medical care if you had
belonged to a different ethnic group?’
However, we were not able to ask why they
felt discriminated against,” Crawley said.
If minority women perceived
racial discrimination, they were 34 percent
less likely to be screened for colorectal
cancer and 48 percent less likely to be
screened for breast cancer, compared with
women of any racial group who did not
perceive discrimination, researchers found.
The results were slightly
different among minority men. Overall, men
who perceived racial discrimination were no
less likely to be screened for colorectal
cancer than those who did not perceive
discrimination.
However, if they had a
regular source of health care, they were 70
percent less likely to receive colorectal
screening if they perceived racial
discrimination.
“This contradicts the general
assumption in public health that having a
usual source of care is a cure all,” Crawley
said. “If men felt discriminated against by
their regular health care provider, they did
not receive screening. So there is something
else factoring in.”
Crawley says the specific
factor would need to be explored in further
research, but it may be that there are
specific racial stereotypes that apply to
men that would not apply to women.
“For example, African
American men may be stereotyped as being
more violent, which would affect how doctors
respond to them and thus create a potential
for discrimination,” said Crawley.
According to Crawley, the
consequences for delayed screening are
dramatic. If detected early, five-year
survival rates for colorectal and breast
cancer are approximately 90 percent.
However, if caught in later stages, the
survival rate for colorectal cancer is 10
percent and 23 percent for breast cancer.
“The longer someone delays
screening the worse the outcome. Perception
of discrimination may be driving the
differences we see in outcomes among
minorities,” said Crawley.
The mission of the American
Association for Cancer Research is to
prevent and cure cancer. Founded in 1907,
AACR is the world’s oldest and largest
professional organization dedicated to
advancing cancer research.
The membership includes more
than 28,000 basic, translational and
clinical researchers; health care
professionals; and cancer survivors and
advocates in the United States and 80 other
countries.
AACR marshals the full
spectrum of expertise from the cancer
community to accelerate progress in the
prevention, diagnosis and treatment of
cancer through high-quality scientific and
educational programs. It funds innovative,
meritorious research grants.
The AACR Annual Meeting
attracts more than 17,000 participants who
share the latest discoveries and
developments in the field.
Special conferences
throughout the year present novel data
across a wide variety of topics in cancer
research, treatment and patient care. AACR
publishes five major peer-reviewed journals:
Cancer Research; Clinical Cancer Research;
Molecular Cancer Therapeutics; Molecular
Cancer Research; and Cancer Epidemiology,
Biomarkers & Prevention. Its most recent
publication and its sixth major journal,
Cancer Prevention Research, is dedicated
exclusively to cancer prevention, from
preclinical research to clinical trials.
The AACR also publishes CR, a
magazine for cancer survivors and their
families, patient advocates, physicians and
scientists. CR provides a forum for sharing
essential, evidence-based information and
perspectives on progress in cancer research,
survivorship and advocacy.
...
...
...