학술논문

Increasing Cervical Cancer Screening among Underserved Women in a Large Urban County Health System: Can It Be Done? What Does It Take?
Document Type
research-article
Source
Medical Care, 2002 Oct 01. 40(10), 891-907.
Subject
Cervical cancer screening
Pap screening
Minority
Indigent
Women
Cancer screening
Vaginal smears
Cervical cancer
Physicians
Womens health
Public health
Screening tests
Medical referrals
Hispanics
Psychoeducational intervention
Language
English
ISSN
00257079
Abstract
Background. Further reduction in avoidable cervical cancer morbidity and mortality may require system-wide, integrated approaches implemented in the public health facilities serving the nation's indigent and minority women. Objectives. Report on the evaluation of a 5-year demonstration project testing a multicomponent (provider, system, and patient) intervention to increase cervical cancer screening among women who receive their health care through the Los Angeles County Department of Health Services, the second largest County Health Department in the nation. Materials and Methods. A longitudinal nonequivalent control group design was utilized. Data were collected during a baseline (no intervention) year and 2.5 years of intervention. A large hospital, one feeder Comprehensive Health Centers (CHC), and three of the health center's feeder Public Health Centers (PHC) received the intervention. Another hospital, CHC and its three feeder PHCs (matched on size, patient characteristics, and range of services provided) served as comparison sites. Independent random samples of patients 18 years and older were drawn annually at each site (n = 18,642). The outcome measure was a receipt of a Papanicolaou smear during a 9-month period. Results. At the Hospital and CHC levels a statistically significant intervention effect was observed after controlling for baseline screening rates and case mix. No intervention effect was observed at the PHCs. Conclusion. An intensive multicomponent intervention can increase cervical cancer screening in a large, urban, County health system serving a low-income minority population of under screened women. Retention of program elements in the postresearch phase, and the difficulties and importance of conducting this type of research, is described.